Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THE ANGLER, by DAVID MACBETH MOIR Poet's Biography First Line: Twas a blithe morning in the golden mouth Last Line: When last they stirr'd the wild-flowers on his grave! Alternate Author Name(s): Delta Subject(s): Fish & Fishing | ||||||||
I. 'TWAS a blithe morning in the golden month Of July, when, in pride of summer power, The sun enliven'd nature: dew-besprent, A wilderness of flowers their scent exhaled Into the soft, warm zephyr; early a-foot, On public roads, and by each hedge-way path, From the far North, and from Hibernia's strand, With vestures many-hued, and ceaseless chat, The reapers to the coming harvest plied Father and mother, stripling, and young child On back or shoulder borne. I trode again A scene of youth, bright in its natural lines Even to a stranger's eyes when first time seen, But sanctified to mine by many a fond And faithful recognition. O'er the Esk, Swoln by nocturnal showers, the hawthorn hung Its garland of green berries, and the bramble Trail'd 'mid the camomile its ripening fruit. Most lovely was the verdure of the hills A rich, luxuriant green, o'er which the sky Of blue, translucent, clear without a cloud, Outspread its arching amplitude serene. With many a gush of music, from each brake Sang forth the choral linnets; and the lark, Ascending from the clover field, by fits Soar'd as it sang, and dwindled from the sight. The cushat stood amidst the topmost boughs Of the tall tree, his white-ring'd neck aslant, Down thro' the leaves to see his brooding mate. 'Mid the tall meadow grass the ox reclined, Or bent his knee, or from beneath the shade Of the broad beech, with ruminant mouth, gaz'd forth. Rustling with wealth, a tissue of fair fields Outstretch'd to left and right in luxury; And the fir forests on the upland slopes Contrasted darkly with the golden grain. II. Embathed in beauty pass'd before my sight, Like blossoms that with sunlight shut and ope, The half-lost dreams of many a holiday, In boyhood spent on that blue river side With those whose names, even now, as alien sounds Ring in the ear, though then our cordial arms Enwreathed each other's necks, while on we roam'd, Singing or silent, pranksome, ne'er at rest, As life were but a jocund pilgrimage, Whose pleasant wanderings found a goal in heaven. But when I reach'd a winding of the stream, By hazels overarch'd, whose swollen nuts Hung in rich clusters, from the marginal bank Of yellow sand, ribb'd by receding waves, I scared the ousel, that, like elfin sprite, Amid the water-lilies lithe and green, Zig-zagg'd from stone to stone; and, turning round The sudden jut, reveal'd before me stood, Silent, within that solitary place In that green solitude so calm and deep An aged angler, plying wistfully, Amid o'erhanging banks and shelvy rocks, Far from the bustle and the din of men, His sinless pastime. Silver were his locks, His figure lank; his dark eye, like a hawk's, Glisten'd beneath his hat of whitest straw, Lightsome of wear, with gut and flies begirt: The osier creel, athwart his shoulders slung, Became full well his coat of velveteen, Square-tail'd, four-pocket'd, and worn for years, As told by weather stains. His quarter-boots, Lash'd with stout leather-thongs, and ankles bare, Spoke the adeptand of full many a day, Through many a changeable and chequer'd year, By mountain torrent, or smooth meadow stream, To that calm sport devoted. O'er him spread A tall, broad sycamore; and, at his feet, Amid the yellow ragwort, rough and high, An undisturbing spaniel lay, whose lids, Half-opening, told his master my approach. III. I turn'd away, I could not bear to gaze On that grey angler with his rod and line; I turn'd awayfor to my heart the sight Brought back, from out the twilight labyrinth Of bypast things, the memory of a day, So sever'd from the present by the lapse Of many a motley'd, life-destroying year, That on my thoughts the recognition came Faintly at firstas breaks the timid dawn Above the sea, or evening's earliest star Through the pavilion of the twilight dim Faintly at first; then kindling to the glow Of that refulgent sunshine, only known To boyhood's careless and unclouded hours. IV. Even yet I feel around my heart the flush Of that calm, windless morning, glorified With summer sunshine brilliant and intense! A tiny boy, scarcely ten summers old, Along blue Esk, under the whispering trees, And by the crumbling banks, daisy-o'ergrown, A cloudless, livelong day I trode with one Whose soul was in his pastime, and whose skill Upon its shores that day no equal saw. O'er my small shoulders was the wicker creel Slung proudly, and the net whose meshes held The minnow, from the shallows deftly raised. Hour after hour augmenting our success, Turn'd what was pleasure first to pleasant toil, Lent languor to my loitering steps, and gave Red to the cheek, and dew-damp to the brow: It was a day that cannot be forgot, A jubilee in childhood's calendar, A green hill-top seen o'er the billowy waste Of dim oblivion's flood: and so it is, That on my morning couchwhat time the sun Tinges the honeysuckle flowers with gold, That cluster round the porchand in the calm Of evening meditation, when the past Spontaneously unfolds the treasuries Of half-forgotten and fragmental things To memory's ceaseless roamings, it comes back, Fragrant and fresh, as if 'twere yesterday. From morn till noon, his light assiduous toil The angler plied; and when the mid-day sun Was high in heaven, under a spreading tree, (Methinks I hear the hum amid its leaves!) Upon a couch of wild-flowers down we sat With healthful palates to our slight repast Of biscuits, and of cheese, and bottled milk; The sward our table, and the boughs our roof: And O! in banquet-hall, where richest cates Luxurious woo the pamper'd appetite, Never did viands proffer such delight To Sybarite upon his silken couch, As did to us our simple fare that day. V. Bright shone the afternoon, say rather burn'd, In floods of molten golden, with all its rich Array of blossoms by that river's side Wild camomile, and lychnis in whose cups The bee delights to murmur, harebells blue, And violets breathing fragrance; nor remote The golden furze, that to the west-wind's sigh Lent its peculiar perfume blandly soft. At times we near'd the wild-duck and her brood In the far angle of some dim-seen pool, Silent and sable, underneath the boughs Of low hung willow; and, at times, the bleat Of a stray lamb would bid us raise our eyes To where it stood above us on the rock, Knee-deep amid the brooma sportive elf. Enshrined in recollection, sleep those hours So brilliant and so beautifulthe scene So full of pastoral lovelinessthe heart With pleasure overflowingand the sky Pavilion'd over all, an arch of peace God with his fair creation reconciled: And O! to be forgotten only with The last fond thoughts of memory, I behold That grand and gorgeous evening, in whose blaze Homeward with laden panniers we return'd. Through the green woods outshot the level rays Of flooding sunlight, tinging the hoar bark Of the old pine-trees, and in crimson dyes. Bathing the waste of flowers that sprang beneath; It was an hour of Paradise restored Eden forth mirror'd to the view again, Ere Happiness had yet forsook its bowers, Or sinless creatures own'd the sway of death. All was repose, and peace, and harmony; The flocks upon the soft knolls resting lay, Or straying nibbled at the pastures green; Up from its clovery lurking-place, the hare Arose; the pheasant from the coppice stray'd; The cony from its hole disporting leapt; The cattle in the bloomy meadows lay Ruminant; the shy foal scarce swerved aside At our approach from under the tall tree Of his delight, shaking his forelocks long In wanton play; while, overhead, his hymn, As 'twere to herald the approach of night, With all her gathering stars, the blackbird sang Melodiously, mellifluously, and Earth Look'd up, reflecting back the smiles of Heaven: For Innocence o'er hill and dale again Seem'd to have spread her mantle, and the voice Of all but joy in grove and glade was hush'd. VI. Thro' the deep glen of Roslinwhere arise Proud castle and chapelle of high St Clair, And Scotland's prowess speakingwe had traced The mazy Esk by cavern'd Hawthornden, Perch'd like an eagle's nest upon the cliffs, And eloquent for aye with Drummond's song; Through Melville's flowery glades; and down the park Of fair Dalkeith, scaring the antler'd deer, 'Neath the huge oaks of Morton and of Monk, Whispering, as stir their boughs the midnight winds. These left behind, with purpling evening, now We stood beside St Michael's holy fane, With its nine centuries of gravestones girt; And, from the slopes of Inveresk, gazed down Upon the Firth of Forth, whose waveless tide Glow'd like a plain of fire. In majesty, O'ercanopied with many-vestured clouds, The mighty sun, low in the farthest west, With orb dilated, o'er the Grampian chain, Mountain up-piled on mountain, huge and blue, Was shedding his last rays adown the shores Of Fife, with all its towns, and woods, and fields, And bathing Ben-Ean and Ben-Ledi's peaks In hues of amethyst. Ray after ray, From the twin Lomond's conic heights declined, And died away the glory; and, at length, As sank the last, low horizontal beams, And Twilight drew her azure curtains round, From out the south twinkled the evening star. VII. Since then full often hath the snowdrop shown Its early flower, hath summer waved its corn, Hath autumn shed its leaves, and Arctic gales Brought wintry desolation. on their wings: When Memory ponders on that boyish scene, Broken seems almost every tie that links That day to this, and to the child the man: The world is alter'd quite in all its thoughts, In all its works and ways, its sights and sounds With the same name it is another sphere, And by another race inhabited. The old familiar dwellings, with their trees Coeval, mouldering wall, and dovecot rent The old familiar faces from the streets, One after one have now all disappear'd, And sober sires are they who then were sons, Giddy and gay: a generation new Dwells where they dwelt, whose tongues are silent quite, Whose bodily forms are reminiscences Fading: the leaden talisman of Truth Hath disenchanted of its rainbow hues The sky, and robb'd the fields of half their bloom. I start, to conjure from the gulf of death The myriads that have gone to come no more: And where is he, the Angler, by whose side That livelong day delightedly I roam'd, While life to both a sunny pastime seem'd? Ask of the winds that from the Atlantic blow, When last they stirr'd the wild-flowers on his grave! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...JOURNEY INTO THE EYE by DAVID LEHMAN THE GREAT BLACK HERON by DENISE LEVERTOV ISLA MUJERES by WILLIAM MATTHEWS SCHOOLS OF LITTLE FISH by MARVIN BELL TWO PICTURES OF A LEAF by MARVIN BELL OF FISH AND FISHERMEN by JOHN CIARDI THE RUSTIC LAD'S LAMENT IN THE TOWN by DAVID MACBETH MOIR |
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