From these extracts it is clear that Dorothy Wordsworth considered the poem as “finished” on the 7th of May, and on the 9th she sent a copy to Coleridge; but that it was not till the 4th of July that it was really finished, and then a second copy was forwarded to Coleridge. It is impossible to say from which of the two MSS. sent to him Coleridge transcribed the copy which he forwarded to Sir George Beaumont. From that copy of a copy (which is now amongst the Beaumont MSS. at Coleorton) the various readings given, on Coleridge’s authority, in the notes to the poem, were obtained some years ago.
The Fenwick note to the poem illustrates Wordsworth’s habit of blending in one description details which were originally separate, both as to time and place. The scenery and the incidents of the poem are alike composite. As he tells us that he met the leech-gatherer a few hundred yards from Dove Cottage, the “lonely place” with its “pool, bare to the eye of heaven,” at once suggests White Moss Common and its small tarn; but he adds that, in the opening stanzas of the poem, he is describing a state of feeling he was in, when crossing the fells at the foot of Ullswater to Askam, and that the image of the hare “running races in her mirth,” with the glittering mist accompanying her, was observed by him, not on White Moss Common, but in one of the ridges of Moor Divock. To H. C. Robinson he said of the “Leech-Gatherer” (Sept. 10, 1816), that “he gave to his poetic character powers of mind which his original did not possess.” (Robinson’s ‘Diary’, etc., vol. ii. p. 24.)
One of the “Poems of the Imagination.”—Ed.
I There was a roaring in the
wind all night;
The rain came heavily and fell in floods;
But now the sun is rising calm and bright;
The birds are singing in the distant woods;
Over his own sweet voice the Stock-dove
broods; 5
The Jay makes answer as the Magpie chatters;
And all the air is filled with pleasant
noise of waters.
II All things that love the
sun are out of doors;
The sky rejoices in the morning’s
birth;
The grass is bright with rain-drops;—on
the moors 10
The hare is running races in her mirth;
And with her feet she from the plashy earth
Raises a mist; that, [1] glittering in
the sun,
Runs with her all the way, wherever she
doth run.
III I was a Traveller then upon
the moor; 15
I saw the hare that raced about with joy;
I heard the woods and distant waters roar;
Or heard them not, as happy as a boy:
The pleasant season did my heart employ:
My old remembrances went from me wholly;
20
And all the ways of men, so vain and melancholy.
IV But, as it sometimes chanceth,
from the might
Of joy in minds that can no further go,
As high as we have mounted in delight
In our dejection do we sink as low;
25
To me that morning did it happen so;
And fears and fancies thick upon me came;
Dim sadness—and blind thoughts,
I knew not, nor could name.