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The Banks of Wye



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THE BANKS OF THE WYE. BOOK I.

"Rouse from thy slumber, pleasure calls, arise,Quit thy half-rural bower, awhile despiseThe thraldom that consumes thee. We who dwellFar from thy land of smoke, advise thee well.Here Nature's bounteous hand around shall fling,Scenes that thy Muse hath never dar'd to sing.When sickness weigh'd thee down, and strength declin'd;When dread eternity absorb'd thy mind,Flow'd the predicting verse, by gloom o'erspread,That 'Cambrian mountains' thou should'st never tread,That 'time-worn cliff, and classic stream to see,'Was wealth's prerogative, despair for thee.Come to the proof; with us the breeze inhale,Renounce despair, and come to Severn's vale;And where the COTSWOLD HILLS are stretch'd along,Seek our green dell, as yet unknown to song:Start hence with us, and trace, with raptur'd eye,The wild meanderings of the beauteous WYE;Thy ten days leisure ten days joy shall prove,And rock and stream breathe amity and love."

Such was the call; with instant ardour hail'd.The syren Pleasure caroll'd and prevail'd;Soon the deep dell appear'd, and the clear browOf ULEY BURY [A] smil'd o'er all below,[Footnote A: Bury, or Burg, the Saxon name for a hill, particularly forone wholly or partially formed by art.]Mansion, and flock, and circling woods that hungRound the sweet pastures where the sky-lark sung.O for the fancy, vigorous and sublime,Chaste as the theme, to triumph over time!Bright as the rising day, and firm as truth,To speak new transports to the lowland youth,That bosoms still might throb, and still adore,When his who strives to charm them beats no more!

One August morn, with spirits high,Sound health, bright hopes, and cloudless sky,A cheerful group their farewell badeTo DURSLEY tower, to ULEY'S shade;And where bold STINCHCOMB'S greenwood side.Heaves in the van of highland pride,Scour'd the broad vale of Severn; thereThe foes of verse shall never dareGenius to scorn, or bound its power,There blood-stain'd BERKLEY'S turrets low'r,A name that cannot pass away,Till time forgets "the Bard" of GRAY.

Quitting fair Glo'ster's northern road,To gain the pass of FRAMELODE,Before us DEAN'S black forest spread,And MAY HILL, with his tufted head,Beyond the ebbing tide appear'd;And Cambria's distant mountains rear'dTheir dark blue summits far away;And SEVERN, 'midst the burning day,Curv'd his bright line, and bore alongThe mingled Avon, pride of song.

The trembling steeds soon ferry'd o'er,Neigh'd loud upon the forest shore;Domains that once, at early morn,Rang to the hunter's bugle horn,When barons proud would bound away;When even kings would hail the day,And swell with pomp more glorious shows,Than ant-hill population knows.Here crested chiefs their bright-arm'd trainOf javelin'd horsemen rous'd amain,And chasing wide the wolf or boar,Bade the deep woodland vallies roar.

Harmless we past, and unassail'd,Nor once at roads or tumpikes rail'd:Through depths of shade oft sun-beams broke,Midst noble FLAXLEY'S bowers of oak;And many a cottage trim and gay,Whisper'd delight through all the way;On hills expos'd, in dells unseen,To patriarchal MITCHEL DEAN....