Poems, &c. (1790) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 81 pages of information about Poems, &c. (1790).

Poems, &c. (1790) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 81 pages of information about Poems, &c. (1790).

The new-wak’d birds upon the branches hop,
Peck their loft down, and bristle out their feathers;
Then stretch their throats and tune their morning song;
Whilst stately crows, high swinging o’er their heads. 
Upon the topmost boughs, in lordly pride,
Mix their hoarse croaking with the linnet’s note;
Till gather’d closer in a sable band,
They take their flight to leek their daily food. 
The village labourer, with careful mind,
As soon as doth the morning light appear,
Opens his eyes with the first darting ray
That pierces thro’ the window of his cot,
And quits his easy bed; then o’er the field,
With lengthen’d swinging strides, betakes his way,
Bearing his spade and hoe across his moulder,
Seen from afar clear glancing in the sun,
And with good will begins his daily work. 
The sturdy sun-burnt boy drives forth the cattle,
And vain of power, bawls to the lagging kine,
Who fain would stay to crop the tender shoots
Of the green tempting hedges as they pass;
Or beats the glist’ning bushes with his club,
To please his fancy with a shower of dew,
And frighten the poor birds who lurk within. 
At ev’ry open door, thro’ all the village,
Half naked children, half awake, are seen
Scratching their heads, and blinking to the light;
Till roused by degrees, they run about,
Or rolling in the sun, amongst the sand
Build many a little house, with heedful art. 
The housewife tends within, her morning care;
And stooping ’midst her tubs of curdled milk,
With busy patience, draws the clear green whey
From the press’d sides of the pure snowy curd;
Whilst her brown dimpled maid, with tuck’d-up sleeve,
And swelling arm, assists her in her toil. 
Pots smoke, pails rattle, and the warm confusion
Still thickens on them, till within its mould,
With careful hands, they press the well-wrought curd.

So goes the morning, till the pow’rful sun
High in the heav’ns sends forth his strengthen’d beams,
And all the freshness of the morn is fled. 
The sweating trav’ller throws his burden down,
And leans his weary shoulder ’gainst a tree. 
The idle horse upon the grassy field
Rolls on his back, nor heeds the tempting clover. 
The swain leaves off his labour, and returns
Slow to his house with heavy sober steps,
Where on the board his ready breakfast plac’d,
Invites the eye, and his right cheerful wife
Doth kindly serve him with unfeign’d good will. 
No sparkling dew-drops hang upon the grass;
Forth steps the mower with his glitt’ring scythe,
In snowy shirt, and doublet all unbrac’d,
White moves he o’er the ridge, with sideling bend,
And lays the waving grass in many a heap. 
In ev’ry field, in ev’ry swampy mead,
The cheerful voice of industry is heard;
The hay-cock rises, and the frequent rake
Sweeps on the yellow hay, in heavy wreaths,
Leaving the smooth green meadow bare behind. 

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Poems, &c. (1790) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.