The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth — Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 515 pages of information about The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth — Volume 2.

  ... and ... 1807.]

[Variant 3: 

1815.

  Violets, do what they will,
  Wither’d on the ground must lie;
  Daisies will be daisies still;
  Daisies they must live and die: 
  Fill your lap, and fill your bosom,
  Only spare the Strawberry-blossom! 1807.]

[Variant 4:  This last stanza was added in the edition of 1815.]

[Variant 5: 

1836.

  When the months of spring are fled
  Hither let us bend our walk; 1815.]

The full title of this poem, in the editions of 1807 to 1832, was ‘Foresight, or the Charge of a Child to his younger Companion’, but it was originally known in the household as “Children gathering Flowers.”  The shortened title was adopted in 1836.  The following is from Dorothy Wordsworth’s Journal: 

“Wednesday, 28th April (1802).—­Copied the ‘Prioress’s Tale’.  William was in the orchard.  I went to him; he worked away at his poem, though he was ill, and tired.  I happened to say that when I was a child I would not have pulled a strawberry blossom; I left him, and wrote out the ‘Manciple’s Tale’.  At dinner time he came in with the poem of ‘Children gathering Flowers,’ but it was not quite finished, and it kept him long from his dinner.  It is now done.  He is working at ’The Tinker.’”

At an earlier date in the same year,—­Jan. 31st, 1802,—­the following occurs: 

“I found a strawberry blossom in a rock.  The little slender flower had more courage than the green leaves, for they were but half expanded and half grown, but the blossom was spread full out.  I uprooted it rashly, and I felt as if I had been committing an outrage; so I planted it again.  It will have but a stormy life of it, but let it live if it can.”

With this poem compare a parallel passage in Marvel’s ’The Picture of T. C. in a Prospect of Flowers’: 

  ’But oh, young beauty of the woods,
  Whom nature courts with fruits and flowers,
  Gather the flowers, but spare the buds;
  Lest Flora, angry at thy crime
  To kill her infants in their prime,
  Should quickly make the example yours;
  And, ere we see,
  Nip in the blossom all our hopes in thee.’

Ed.

* * * * *

TO THE SMALL CELANDINE [A]

Composed April 30, 1802.—­Published 1807

[Written at Town-end, Grasmere.  It is remarkable that this flower, coming out so early in the spring as it does, and so bright and beautiful, and in such profusion, should not have been noticed earlier in English verse.  What adds much to the interest that attends it is its habit of shutting itself up and opening out according to the degree of light and temperature of the air.—­I.F.]

One of the “Poems of the Fancy.”  In the original MS. this poem is called ‘To the lesser Celandine’, but in the proof “small” was substituted for “lesser.”

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The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth — Volume 2 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.