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Sunday Walks.

By John Clare

Topics: classic

How fond the rustic's ear at leisure dwells     On the soft soundings of his village bells,     As on a Sunday morning at his ease     He takes his rambles, just as fancies please,     Down narrow balks that intersect the fields,     Hid in profusion that its produce yields:     Long twining peas, in faintly misted greens;     And wing'd-leaf multitudes of crowding beans;     And flighty oatlands of a lighter hue;     And speary barley bowing down with dew;     And browning wheat-ear, on its taper stalk,     With gentle breezes bending o'er the balk,     Greeting the parting hand that brushes near     With patting welcomes of a plenteous year.     Or narrow lanes, where cool and gloomy-sweet     Hedges above-head in an arbour meet,     Meandering down, and resting for awhile     Upon a moss-clad molehill or a stile;     While every scene that on his leisure crowds,     Wind-waving valleys and light passing clouds,     In brighter colours seems to meet the eye,     Than in the bustle of the days gone by.     A peaceful solitude around him creeps,     And nature seemly o'er her quiet sleeps;     No noise is heard, save sutherings through the trees     Of brisk wind gushes, or a trembling breeze;     And song of linnets in the hedge-row thorn,     Twittering their welcomes to the day's return;     And hum of bees, where labour's doom'd to stray     In ceaseless bustle on his weary way:     And low of distant cattle here and there,     Seeking the stream, or dropping down to lair;     And bleat of sheep, and horses' playful neigh,     From rustic's whips, and plough, and waggon, free,     Baiting in careless freedom o'er the leas,     Or turn'd to knap each other at their ease.     While 'neath the bank on which he rests his head     The brook mourns drippling o'er its pebbly bed,     And whimpers soothingly a calm serene     O'er the lull'd comforts of a Sunday scene,     He ponders round, and muses with a smile     On thriving produce of his earlier toil;     What once were kernels from his hopper sown,     Now browning wheat-ears and oat-bunches grown,     And pea-pods swell'd, by blossoms long forsook,     And nearly ready for the scythe and hook:     He pores with wonder on the mighty change     Which suns and showers perform, and think it strange;     And though no philosophic reasoning draws     His musing marvels home to nature's cause,     A simple feeling in him turns his eye     To where the thin clouds smoke along the sky;     And there his soul consents the Power must reign     Who rules the year, and shoots the spindling grain,     Lights up the sun, and sprinkles rain below--     The fount of nature whence all causes flow.     Thus much the feeling of his bosom warms,     Nor seeks he further than his soul informs.     A six-days' prisoner, life's support to earn     From dusty cobwebs and the murky barn,     The weary thresher meets the rest that's given,     And thankful soothes him in the boon of heaven;     But happier still in Sabbath-walks he feels,     With love's sweet pledges poddling at his heels,     That oft divert him with their childish glee     In fruitless chases after bird and bee;     And, eager gathering every flower they pass     Of yellow lambtoe and the totter-grass,     Oft whimper round him disappointment's sigh     At sight of blossom that's in bloom too high,     And twitch his sleeve with all their coaxing powers     To urge his hand to reach the tempting flowers:     Then as he climbs, their eager hopes to crown,     On gate or stile to pull the blossoms down     Of pale hedge-roses straggling wild and tall,     And scrambling woodbines that outgrow them all,     He turns to days when he himself would teaze     His tender father for such toys as these,     And smiles with rapture, as he plucks the flowers,     To meet the feelings of those lovely hours,     And blesses Sunday's rest, whose peace at will     Retains a portion of those pleasures still.     But when the duty of the day's expir'd,     And priest and parish offer what's requir'd,     When godly farmer shuts his book again     To talk of profits from advancing grain,     Short memory keeping what the parson read,     Prayers 'neath his arm, and business in his head;     And, dread of boys, the clerk is left to close     The creaking church-door on its week's repose;     Then leave me Sunday's remnant to employ     In seeking sweets of solitary joy,     And lessons learning from a simple tongue,     Where nature preaches in a cricket's song;     Where every tiny thing that flies and creeps     Some feeble language owns, its prayer to raise;     Where all that lives, by noise or silence, keeps     A homely sabbath in its Maker's praise.     There, free from labour, let my musings stray     Where footpaths ramble from the public way     In quiet loneliness o'er many a scene,     Through grassy close, or grounds of blossom'd bean;     Oft winding balks where groves of willows spread     Their welcome waving shadows over-head,     And thorns beneath in woodbines often drest     Inviting strongly in their peace to rest;     Or wildly left to follow choice at will     O'er many a trackless vale and pathless hill,     Or, nature's wilderness, o'er heaths of goss,     Each footstep sinking ankle-deep in moss,     By pleasing interruptions often tied     A hedge to clamber or a brook to stride;     Where no approaching feet or noises rude     Molest the quiet of one's solitude,     Save birds, their song broke by a false alarm,     Through branches fluttering from their fancy'd harm;     And cows and sheep with startled low and bleat     Disturb'd from lair by one's unwelcome feet,--     The all that's met in Sunday's slumbering ease,     That adds to, more than checks the power to please.     And sweet it is to creep one's blinded way     Where woodland boughs shut out the smiles of day,     Where, hemm'd in glooms that scarce give leave to spy     A passing cloud or patch of purple sky,     We track, half hidden from the world besides,     Sweet hermit-nature that in woodlands hides;     Where nameless flowers that never meet the sun,     Like bashful modesty, the sight to shun,     Bud in their snug retreat, and bloom, and die,     Without one notice of a passing eye;     There, while I drop me in the woody waste     'Neath arbours Nature fashions to her taste,     Entwining oak-trees with the ivy's gloom     And woodbines propping over boughs to bloom,     And scallop'd briony mingling round her bowers     Whose fine bright leaves make up the want of flowers,--     With nature's minstrels of the woods let me,     Thou Lord of sabbaths, add a song to thee,     An humble offering for the holy day     Which thou most wise and graciously hast given,     As leisure dropt in labour's rugged way     To claim a passport with the rest to heaven.

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"How fond the rustic's ear at leisure dwells..."

Exploring the themes of classic, John Clare delivers a powerful performance in "Sunday Walks."... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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Author:John Clare

"How fond the rustic's ear at leisure dwells..." by John Clare

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

John Clare

About John Clare

John Clare (1793–1864) was an English poet known as the "peasant poet" for his humble origins. His nature poetry—including "I Am" and "Badger"—captures the English countryside with extraordinary precision and emotional honesty, and he is now recognized as one of the finest nature poets in the language.

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