THE master of the manor house each morn Upon his shining steed through arbored gates Rides forth and out upon the dusty road To yon small hamlet smiling on the hill. At eve rides back with swaying form; he meets The faithful footman, and, his charger placed, He wends his way into the mansion hall, While I, down here in meadow lands all day, I only s-s-stack the hay. The opulent lord when mellow days are come, At the high note of the red-combed chanticleer, With horse and hound and merry crowd now bent Upon the chase. Swift through fox-scented roads, Stopping, perchance, at many a wayside inn, The music of the jingling glass is his, While I down here in perfumed clover fields, Hear but the music of the lark and jay. I only s-s-stack the hay. Lone is the mansion on the sunlit hill, Save for the daughter of the chivalric lord, Who comes now, finger-kissed by high-topped sheaves (Pausing the while, half startled by the quail) To where the haycocks dot the sallow fields; Comes in the roseate flush of maidenhood; Comes with a truant smile upon her lips, And romping up to me exclaiming: "Say!" B-b-but I -- I only s-s-stack the hay. Then spake she soft as runs a summer brook Or novel of some scribe of amorous mind: "How far the huntsmen must be on the road, Because the sun comes through my window-blind; Within -- strange creakings 'bout the halls: without -- The scurrying leaves. So lonely am I now I've wandered here to ask whate'er betide. Wouldst cease thy work? Pray, must you toil to-day?" "W-w-well, yes," I s-s-say, "I have t-t-to s-s-stack the hay." "Ah, sir!" she then replied: "A banquet spread But yesternight for me with many guests And suitors gathered 'round the festal board Sought ardently my hand; and one forth brought A golden cup in memory of my birth. Yea, each in quest of all these lands. Kind sir, How now; wouldst thou not drink from out my cup? Prithee, come solace me! Live while you live, for aye." "I c-c-ca-ca-can't," I s-s-say. "I have to s-s-stacl the hay." The days roll on and now a blase youth Rides by the manor house. A reaper he In wisdom's fields. No importuning maid Bade him alight. She beckons. Quick he opes The gates, and, hastening to the banquet halls, He drinks to her, and, pledging endless love, They fly to distant parish. Now the hills And vales and lands that roll away are his. While I, down here in meadow-lands all day, I only s-s-stack the hay. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...BRIGHTNESS AS A POIGNANT LIGHT by DAVID IGNATOW CHURCHILL'S GRAVE by GEORGE GORDON BYRON TWO SONGS: 2 by CECIL DAY LEWIS DORA VERSUS ROSE by HENRY AUSTIN DOBSON ON LORD HOLLAND'S SEAT NEAR MARGATE, KENT by THOMAS GRAY VASHTI by FRANCES ELLEN WATKINS HARPER THE RUSTIC LAD'S LAMENT IN THE TOWN by DAVID MACBETH MOIR |