Too heavily upon the lily's head,
Oft leaves a saving moisture at its root. Malice, beholding you, will melt away.
Go! 'tis a town where both of us were born; None will reproach you, for our truth is known; And if, amid those once-bright bowers, our fate Remain unpitied, pity is not in man. With ornaments- -the prettiest, nature yields Or art can fashion, shall you deck our1 boy, And feed his countenance with your own sweet looks Till no one can resist him.—Now, even now,
I see him sporting on the sunny lawn ; My father from the window sees him too; Startled, as if some new-created thing Enriched the earth, or Faery of the woods Bounded before him ;-but the unweeting Child Shall by his beauty win his grandsire's heart So that it shall be softened, and our loves End happily, as they began!"
Appeared but seldom; oftener was he seen Propping a pale and melancholy face
Upon the Mother's bosom; resting thus
His head upon one breast, while from the other The Babe was drawing in its quiet food. -That pillow is no longer to be thine,
Fond Youth! that mournful solace now must pass Into the list of things that cannot be ! Unwedded Julia, terror-smitten, hears
The sentence, by her mother's lip pronounced, That dooms her to a convent.-Who shall tell, Who dares report, the tidings to the lord Of her affections? so they blindly asked Who knew not to what quiet depths a weight Of agony had pressed the Sufferer down:
The word, by others dreaded, he can hear Composed and silent, without visible sign Of even the least emotion. Noting this, When the impatient object of his love Upbraided him with slackness, he returned No answer, only took the mother's hand And kissed it; seemingly devoid of pain, Or care, that what so tenderly he pressed Was a dependant on 1 the obdurate heart Of one who came to disunite their lives For ever-sad alternative! preferred, By the unbending Parents of the Maid, To secret 'spousals meanly disavowed. -So be it!
A season after Julia had withdrawn To those religious walls. He, too, departs- Who with him?--even the senseless Little-one. With that sole charge he passed the city-gates, For the last time, attendant by the side Of a close chair, a litter, or sedan,
In which the Babe was carried. To a hill, That rose a brief league distant from the town, The dwellers in that house where he had lodged Accompanied his steps, by anxious love
Impelled; they parted from him there, and stood Watching below till he had disappeared On the hill top. His eyes he scarcely took, Throughout that journey, from the vehicle (Slow-moving ark of all his hopes !) that veiled 255 The tender infant: and at every inn,
And under every hospitable tree
At which the bearers halted or reposed, Laid him with timid care upon his knees,
And looked, as mothers ne'er were known to look, Upon the nursling which his arms embraced.
This was the manner in which Vaudracour Departed with his infant; and thus reached His father's house, where to the innocent child Admittance was denied. The young man spake No word 1 of indignation or reproof, But of his father begged, a last request, That a retreat might be assigned to him Where in forgotten quiet he might dwell, With such allowance as his wants required; For wishes he had none. To a lodge that stood Deep in a forest, with leave given, at the age Of four-and-twenty summers he withdrew; And thither took with him his motherless Babe,2 And one domestic for their common needs, An aged woman. It consoled him here To attend upon the orphan, and perform Obsequious service to the precious child, Which, after a short time, by some mistake Or indiscretion of the Father, died.- The Tale I follow to its last recess
Of suffering or of peace, I know not which : Theirs be the blame who caused the woe, not mine!
From this time forth he never shared a smile With mortal creature. An Inhabitant Of that same town, in which the pair had left So lively a remembrance of their griefs, By chance of business, coming within reach Of his retirement, to the forest lodge
Repaired, but only found the matron there,1 Who told him that his pains were thrown away, For that her Master never uttered word To living thing-not even to her.-Behold! While they were speaking, Vaudracour approached; But, seeing some one near, as on the latch Of the garden-gate his hand was laid, he shrunk—2 And, like a shadow, glided out of view.
Shocked at his savage aspect; from the place The visitor retired.
Cut off from all intelligence with man,
And shunning even the light of common day;
Nor could the voice of Freedom, which through France Full speedily resounded, public hope,
Or personal memory of his own deep wrongs, Rouse him but in those solitary shades
His days he wasted, an imbecile mind!
In the preface to his volume, "Poems of Wordsworth chosen and edited by Matthew Arnold," that distinguished poet and critic has said (p. xxv.), “I can read with pleasure and edification everything of Wordsworth, I think, except Vaudracour and Julia."-ED.
With an intent to visit him. He reached The house, and only found the Matron there,
But, seeing some one near, even as his hand Was stretched towards the garden gate, he shrunk-
DURING 1805, the autobiographical poem, which was afterwards named by Mrs. Wordsworth The Prelude, was finished. In that year also Wordsworth wrote the Ode to Duty, To a Sky-Lark, Fidelity, the fourth poem To the Daisy, the Elegiac Stanzas suggested by a Picture of Peele Castle in a Storm, the Elegiac Verses in memory of his brother John, The Waggoner, and a few other poems.-ED.
FRENCH REVOLUTION,
AS IT APPEARED TO ENTHUSIASTS AT ITS COMMENCEMENT
REPRINTED FROM THE FRIEND
Composed 1805.-Published 1809
[An extract from the long poem on my own poetical education. It was first published by Coleridge in his Friend, which is the reason of its having had a place in every edition of my poems since.-I. F.]
These lines appeared first in The Friend, No. II, October 26, 1809, p. 163. They afterwards found a place amongst the "Poems of the Imagination," in all the collective editions from 1815 onwards. They are part of the eleventh book of The Prelude, entitled France (concluded)," 11. 105-144. Wordsworth gives the date 1805, but these lines possibly belong to the year 1804.-ED.
OH! pleasant exercise of hope and joy!
For mighty were 1 the auxiliars which then stood
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