“Summer” opens with some reflections on the farmer’s life in a prosy Crabbe-like manner; and here it may be noted that as a rule Bloomfield no sooner attempts to rise to a general view than he grows flat; and in like manner he usually fails when he attempts wide prospects and large effects. He is at his best only when describing scenes and incidents at the farm in which he himself is a chief actor, as in this part when, after the sowing of the turnip seed, he is sent out to keep the small birds from the ripening corn:
There thousands in a flock, for
ever gay,
Loud chirping sparrows welcome on
the day,
And from the mazes of the leafy
thorn
Drop one by one upon the bending
corn.
Giles trudging along the borders of the field scares them with his brushing-pole, until, overcome by fatigue and heat, he takes a rest by the brakes and lying, half in sun and half in shade, his attention is attracted to the minute insect life that swarms about him:
The small dust-coloured beetle climbs
with pain
O’er the smooth plantain leaf,
a spacious plain!
Then higher still by countless steps
conveyed,
He gains the summit of a shivering
blade,
And flirts his filmy wings and looks
around,
Exulting in his distance from the
ground.
It is one of his little exquisite pictures. Presently his vision is called to the springing lark:
Just starting from the corn, he
cheerly sings,
And trusts with conscious pride
his downy wings;
Still louder breathes, and in the
face of day
Mounts up and calls on Giles to
mark his way.
Close to his eye his hat he instant
bends
And forms a friendly telescope that
lends
Just aid enough to dull the glaring
light
And place the wandering bird before
his sight,
That oft beneath a light cloud sweeps
along;
Lost for a while yet pours a varied
song;
The eye still follows and the cloud
moves by,
Again he stretches up the clear
blue sky,
His form, his motions, undistinguished
quite,
Save when he wheels direct from
shade to light.
In the end he falls asleep, and waking refreshed picks up his poles and starts again brushing round.
Harvesting scenes succeed, with a picture of Mary, the village beauty, taking her share in the work, and how the labourers in their unwonted liveliness and new-found wit
Confess the presence of a pretty face.
She is very rustic herself in her appearance:—
Her hat awry, divested of her gown,
Her creaking stays of leather, stout
and brown:
Invidious barrier! why art thou
so high,
When the slight covering of her
neck slips by,
Then half revealing to the eager
sight
Her full, ripe bosom, exquisitely
white?