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Your prized companions.—Many are the notes
Which, in his tuneful course, the wind draws forth
From rocks, woods, caverns, heaths, and dashing shores ;
And well those lofty brethren bear their part
In the wild concert-chiefly when the storm
Rides high; then all the upper air they fill
With roaring sound, that ceases not to flow,
Like smoke, along the level of the blast,
In mighty current; theirs, too, is the song
Of stream and headlong flood that seldom fails;
And, in the grim and breathless hour of noon,
Methinks that I have heard them echo back

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The thunder's greeting. Nor have nature's laws
Left them ungifted with a power to yield
Music of finer tone; a harmony,

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So do I call it, though it be the hand

Of silence, though there be no voice ;-the clouds,

The mist, the shadows, light of golden suns,
Motions of moonlight, all come thither-touch,
And have an answer-thither come, and shape
A language not unwelcome to sick hearts
And idle spirits :--there the sun himself,
At the calm close of summer's longest day,*
Rests his substantial orb ;-between those heights
And on the top of either pinnacle,

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More keenly than elsewhere in night's blue vault,
Sparkle the stars, as of their station proud.
Thoughts are not busier in the mind of man
Than the mute agents stirring there :—alone
Here do I sit and watch.”—†

1 1827.

frame;

1814.

*This is strictly accurate. On and about the 21st June, the sun, as seen from Blea Tarn, sets just between the Langdale Pikes.-ED.

"Mark how the wind rejoices in these peaks, and they give back its wild pleasure; how all the things which touch and haunt them get their reply; how they are loved and love; how busy are the mute agents there; how proud the stars to shine on them." (Stopford A. Brooke's Theology in the English Poets, p. 108.)-ED.

VOL. V

H

A fall of voice,

Regretted like the nightingale's last note,

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Had scarcely closed this high-wrought strain of rapture
Ere with inviting smile the Wanderer said: 1
"Now for the tale with which you threatened us!"
"In truth the threat escaped me unawares :

Should the tale tire you, let this challenge stand
For my excuse.

Dissevered from mankind,

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As to your eyes and thoughts we must have seemed 2
When ye looked down upon us from the crag,
Islanders mid 3 a stormy mountain sea,

We are not so ;-perpetually we touch
Upon the vulgar ordinances 4 of the world;
And he, whom this our cottage hath to-day
Relinquished, lived 5 dependent for his bread
Upon the laws of public charity.

The Housewife, tempted by such slender gains
As might from that occasion be distilled,
Opened, as she before had done for me,

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With brightening face

The Wanderer heard him speaking thus, and said, 1814.

A fall of voice,

Regretted like the Nightingale's last note,
Had scarcely closed this high-wrought Rhapsody, 1827.
Had scarcely closed this strain of thankful rapture,

Ere with inviting voice

2 1827.

C.

MS.

unawares

Tire your attention. -Outcast and cut off

And was forgotten. Let this challenge stand
For my excuse, if what I shall relate

As we seem here, and must have seemed to you

1814.

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Her doors to admit this homeless Pensioner ;
The portion gave of coarse but wholesome fare
Which appetite required—a blind dull nook,
Such as she had, the kennel of his rest!
This, in itself not ill, would yet have been
Ill borne in earlier life; but his was now
The still contentedness of seventy years.
Calm did he sit under1 the wide-spread tree
Of his old age: and yet less calm and meek,
Winningly meek or venerably calm,
Than slow and torpid; paying in this wise
A penalty, if penalty it were,

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For spendthrift feats, excesses of his prime.
I loved the old Man, for I pitied him!
A task it was, I own, to hold discourse

With one so slow in gathering up his thoughts,
But he was a cheap pleasure to my eyes;
Mild, inoffensive, ready in his way,

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And helpful to his utmost power: and there

Our housewife knew full well what she possessed
He was her vassal of all labour, tilled

Her garden, from the pasture fetched her kine;
And, one among the orderly array

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Of hay-makers, beneath the burning sun
Maintained his place; or heedfully pursued
His course, on errands bound, to other vales,
Leading sometimes an inexperienced child
Too young for any profitable task.

So moved he like a shadow that performed
Substantial service.* Mark me now, and learn

1 1836.

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2 1827.

useful

beneath

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* "The account given by the Solitary, towards the close of the second book, in all that belongs to the character of the old man, was taken from a Grasmere pauper, who was boarded in the last house quitting the vale on the road to Ambleside."-I. F.

For what reward!-The moon her monthly round
Hath not completed since our dame, the queen

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Were hidden, and black vapours coursed their sides;
This had I seen, and saw; but, till she spake,
Was wholly ignorant that my ancient Friend-
Who at her bidding, early and alone,
Had clomb aloft to delve the moorland 2 turf
For winter fuel-to his noontide meal
Returned not, and now, haply, on the heights 3
Lay at the mercy of this raging storm.

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' Inhuman ! '—said I, ' was an old Man's life
Not worth the trouble of a thought?-alas !
This notice comes too late,' With joy I saw
Her husband enter-from a distant vale.
We sallied forth together; found the tools
Which the neglected veteran had dropped,
But through all quarters looked for him in vain.
We shouted-but no answer! Darkness fell
Without remission of the blast or shower,
And fears for our own safety drove us home.

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'I, who weep little, did, I will confess, The moment I was seated here alone, Honour my little cell with some few tears

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Which anger and 1 resentment could not dry.
All night the storm endured; and, soon as help
Had been collected from the neighbouring vale,
With morning we renewed our quest: the wind
Was fallen, the rain abated, but the hills
Lay shrouded in impenetrable mist;
And long and hopelessly we sought in vain :
'Till, chancing on that 2 lofty ridge to pass
A heap of ruin-almost without walls

And wholly without roof (the bleached remains
Of a small chapel, where, in ancient time,
The peasants of these lonely valleys used
To meet for worship on that central height)—
We there espied the object of our search,3
Lying full three parts buried among tufts
Of heath-plant, under and above him strewn,
To baffle, as he might, the watery storm :
And there we found him breathing peaceably,
Snug as a child that hides itself in sport
'Mid a green hay-cock in a sunny field.
We spake he made reply, but would not stir
At our entreaty; less from want of power
Than apprehension and bewildering thoughts.*

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And wholly without roof (in ancient time

It was a Chapel, a small Edifice

In which the Peasants of these lonely Dells

For worship met upon that central height)—

Chancing to pass this wreck of stones, we there
Espied at last the Object of our search,
Couched in a nook, and seemingly alive.

It would have moved you, had you seen the guise
In which he occupied his chosen bed,

1814.

* "The character of his hostess, and all that befell the poor man upon the mountain, belongs to Paterdale. The woman I knew well; her name was

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