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The cudgel rattles, and the wrestler twines.
Age too shines out; and, garrulous, recounts
The feats of youth. Thus they rejoice; nor think
That, with to-morrow's sun, their annual toil
Begins again the never-ceasing round.

THE

HAPPINESS OF A RETIRED COUNTRY LIFE. LUXURY, POMP, FLATTERY, AND CARES OF THE CITY LIFE. O, knew he but his happiness, of men The happiest he! who far from public rage, Deep in the vale, with a choice few retired,

Drinks the pure pleasures of the Rural Life. [gate,

Rush into blood, the sack of cities seek;
Unpierced, exulting in the widow's wail,
The virgin's shriek, and infant's trembling cry.
Let some, far-distant from their native soil,
Urged or by want or hardened avarice,
Find other lands beneath another sun.
Let this through cities work his eager way,
By legal outrage and established guile,
The social sense extinct; and that ferment
Mad into tumult the seditious herd,

Or melt them down to slavery. Let these
Ensnare the wretched in the toils of law,

What though the dome be wanting, whose proud Fomenting discord, and perplexing right, Each morning, vomits out the sneaking crowd

Of flatterers false, and in their turn abused?

Vile intercourse! What though the glittering robe,
Of every hue reflected light can give,

Or floating loose, or stiff with mazy gold,
The pride and gaze of fools, oppress him not?
What though, from utmost land and sea purveyed,
For him each rarer tributary life

Bleeds not, and his insatiate table heaps

With luxury and death? What though his bowl
Flames not with costly juice; nor sunk in beds,
Oft of gay care, he tosses out the night,
Or melts the thoughtless hours in idle state?
What though he knows not those fantastic joys
That still amuse the wanton, still deceive;
A face of pleasure, but a heart of pain;
Their hollow moments undelighted all?

TRUE HAPPINESS. AGRICULTURAL PLENTY DESCRIBED.COUNTRY SCENERY AND RURAL VIRTUES.

Sure peace is his; a solid life, estranged To disappointment, and fallacious hope : Rich in content, in Nature's bounty rich,

In herbs and fruits; whatever greens the Spring, When heaven descends in showers; or bends the

bough,

When Summer reddens, and when Autumn beams;
Or in the wintry glebe whatever lies
Concealed, and fattens with the richest sap:
These are not wanting; nor the milky drove,
Luxuriant, spread o'er all the lowing vale;
Nor bleating mountains; nor the chide of streams,
And hum of bees, inviting sleep sincere
Into the guiltless breast, beneath the shade,
Or thrown at large amid the fragrant hay;
Nor aught besides of prospect, grove, or song,
Dim grottoes, gleaming lakes, and fountain clear.
Here too dwells simple Truth; plain Innocence ;
Unsullied Beauty; sound, unbroken Youth,
Patient of labor, with a little pleased;
Health ever blooming; unambitious Toil;
Calm Contemplation, and poetic Ease.

THE SAILOR'S AND SOLDIER'S LIVES CONTRASTED WITH THAT
OF THE FARMER. THE MONEY-MAKER; LAWYER; POLI-
TICIAN.

Let others brave the flood in quest of gain, And beat, for joyless months, the gloomy wave. Let such as deem it glory to destroy

An iron race! and those of fairer front,
But equal inhumanity, in courts,

Delusive pomp, and dark cabals, delight;
Wreathe the deep bow, diffuse the lying smile,
And tread the weary labyrinth of state.

THE CONTRASTED PEACE OF RURAL LIFE. ENJOYMENTS OF
EACH REVOLVING MONTH AND SEASON.

While he, from all the stormy passions free
That restless men involve, hears, and but hears,
At distance safe, the human tempest roar,
Wrapped close in conscious peace. The fall of kings,
The rage of nations, and the crush of states,
Move not the man, who, from the world escaped,
In still retreats and flowery solitudes,

To Nature's voice attends, from month to month,
And day to day, through the revolving year;
Admiring, sees her in her every shape;
Feels all her sweet emotions at his heart;
Takes what she liberal gives, nor thinks of more.
He, when young Spring protrudes the bursting germs,
Marks the first bud, and sucks the healthful gale
Into his freshened soul; her genial hours
He full enjoys; and not a beauty blows,
And not an opening blossom breathes in vain.
In Summer he, beneath the living shade,
Such as o'er frigid Tempè wont to wave,
Or Hemus cool, reads what the muse, of these,
Perhaps, has in immortal numbers sung;
Or what she dictates writes: and, oft an eye
Shot round, rejoices in the vigorous year.

FRIENDS ;

RURAL ENJOYMENTS OF AUTUMN AND WINTER.
BOOKS; IMAGINATION; FAMILY; CHILDREN; DANCE AND
SONG. LIFE OF THE ADAMIC, OR GOLDEN AGE.
When Autumn's yellow lustre gilds the world,
And tempts the sickled swain into the field,
Seized by the general joy, his heart distends
With gentle throes; and, through the tepid gleams
Deep musing, then he best exerts his song.
E'en Winter wild to him is full of bliss.
The mighty tempest, and the hoary waste,
Abrupt and deep, stretched o'er the buried earth,
Awake to solemn thought. At night the skies,
Disclosed, and kindled, by refining frost,
Pour every lustre on the exalted eye.

A friend, a book, the stealing hours secure,
And mark them down for wisdom. With swift wing
O'er land and sea imagination roams;

Or truth, divinely breaking on his mind,
Elates his being, and unfolds his powers;
Or in his breast heroic virtue burns.
The touch of kindred too and love he feels;
The modest eye, whose beams on his alone
Ecstatic shine; the little, strong embrace
Of prattling children, twined around his neck,
And emulous to please him, calling forth
The fond parental soul. Nor purpose gay,
Amusement, dance, or song, he sternly scorns ;
For happiness and true philosophy
Are of the social, still, and smiling kind.
This is the life which those who fret in guilt,
And guilty cities, never knew; the life
Led by primeval ages, uncorrupt,
When angels dwelt, and God Himself, with man!

CONCLUDING APOSTROPHE TO THE GOD OF NATURE. — THE
STUDY OF THE NATURAL SCIENCES, AND OF MIND.

O, Nature! all-sufficient! over all!
Enrich me with the knowledge of thy works;

Snatch me to heaven; thy rolling wonders there,
World beyond world, in infinite extent,
Profusely scattered o'er the blue immense,
Show me; their motions, periods, and their laws
Give me to scan; through the disclosing deep
Light my blind way: the mineral strata there ;
Thrust blooming thence the vegetable world;
O'er that the rising system, more complex,
Of animals; and, higher still, the mind,
The varied scene of quick-compounded thought,
And where the mixing passions endless shift;
These ever open to my ravished eye

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Tusser's "September's Husbandry.

THRESH seed, and to fanning, September doth cry,
Get plough to the field, and be sowing of rye :
To harrow the ridges, ere ever ye strike,1
Is one piece of husbandry Suffolk doth like.

Sow timely thy white wheat, sow rye in the dust,
Let seed have his longing, let soil have her lust.2 **
But sow it not mixed, to grow so on land,
Lest rye tarry wheat, till it shed as it stand. * *

Though beans be in sowing but scattered in,
Yet wheat, rye, and peason, I love not too thin:
Sow barley and dredge with a plentiful hand,
Lest weed, stead of seed, overgroweth thy land.
No sooner a sowing, but out by and by,
With mother or boy, that alarum can cry;
And let them be armed with sling or with bow,
To scare away pigeon, the rook, and the crow.3
Seed sown, draw a furrow, the water to drain,
And dyke up such ends as in harm do remain. **
Saint Michel doth bid thee amend the marsh wall,
The brock and the crab-hole, the foreland and all.**
Now geld, with the gelder, the ram and the bull,
Sew ponds, amend dams, and sell webster thy wool.

1 Striking is the last ploughing before the seed is committed to the ground.

2 That is, adapt yourself to the natures of soils and seeds. 3 Crows destroy insects enough to pay for any temporary depredations, especially if watched during sowing; pigeons are always destructive.

Out, fruit go and gather, but not in the dew,
With crab and the walnut, for fear of a shrew.
The moon in the wane, gather fruit for to last,
But winter fruit gather when Michel is past. * *
Fruit gathered too timely will taste of the wood,
Will shrink and be bitter, and seldom prove good:
So fruit that is shaken, and beat off a tree,
With bruising in falling, soon faulty will be.

Now burn up the bees, that ye mind for to drive,
At midsummer drive them, and save them alive;
Place hive in good air, set southly and warm,
And take, in due season, wax honey and swarm.
Set hive on a plank, not too low by the ground,
Where herb with the flowers may compass it round;
And boards to defend it from north and north-east,
From showers and rubbish, from vermin and beast.

Wife, into thy garden, and set me a plot,
With strawberry roots, of the best to be got:
Such growing abroad, among thorns in the wood,
Well chosen and picked, prove excellent good.
The barberry, respis, and gooseberry, too,
Look now to be planted, as other things do:
The gooseberry, respis, and roses, all three,
With strawberries under them, trimly agree.

Now pluck up thy hemp, and go beat out the seed,
And afterward water it, as ye see need.

*

Browne's "Britannia's Pastorals."

EXTRACTS.

THE GOLDEN AGE DESCRIBED.

GRADUAL CORRUPTION.

HAPPY ye days of old, when every waste
Was like a sanctuary to the chaste;
When incests, rapes, adulteries, were not known,
All pure as blossoms which are newly blown.
Maids were as free from spots and soils within,
As most unblemished in the outward skin.
Men every plain and cottage did afford,

As smooth in deeds, as they were fair of word.
Maidens with men as sisters with their brothers,
And men and maids conversed as with their mothers,
Free from suspicion, or the rage of blood,
Strife only reigned, for all strived to be good.

SIMILE OF THE FLEDGLING WRENS.

But then, as little wrens but newly fledged,
First by their nests, hop up and down the hedge;
Then one from bough to bough gets up a tree,
His fellow noting his agility,

Thinks he as well may venture as the other,
So fluttering from one spray unto another
Gets to the top, and then emboldened flies
Unto a height past ken of human eyes.
So time brought worse; men first desired to talk,
Then came suspect; and then a private walk;
Then by consent appointed times of meeting,
Where most securely each might kiss his sweeting.
Lastly, with lusts their panting breasts so swell,
They came to- but to what I blush to tell.
And entered thus, rapes uséd were of all,

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And as within a landscape that doth stand Wrought by the pencil of some curious hand, . We may descry here meadow, there a wood, Here standing ponds, and there a running flood. Here on some mount a house of pleasure vaunted, Where once the roaring cannon had been planted; There on a hill a swain pipes out the day, Out-braving all the choristers of May. A huntsman here follows his cry of hounds, Driving the hare along the fallow grounds; Whilst one at hand, seeming the sport to allow, Follows the hounds, and careless leaves the plough. There in another place some high-raised land In pride bears out her breasts unto the strand. Here stands a bridge, and there a conduit head, While round a May-pole some the measures tread ; There boys the truant play and leave their book

Here stands an angler with a baited hook.
There for a stag one lurks within a bough -
Here sits a maiden milking of her cow.
There on a goodly plain, by Time thrown down,
Lies buried in his dust some ancient town;
Who now in-villaged, there is only seen
In its vast ruins what its state has been ;
And all of these in shadows so expressed
Make the beholder's eyes to take no rest.

TWO DAYS DESCRIBED.

Now had the sun, in golden chariot hurled, Twice bid good-morrow to the nether world; And Cynthia, in her orb and perfect round, Twice viewed the shadows of the upper ground. Twice had the day-star ushered forth the light; And twice the evening star proclaimed the night, Ere once the sweet-faced boy (now all forlorn) Came with his pipe to re-salute the morn.

WINTER. GIOUS VICE.

* *

TRUTH, IN HER WANDERINGS, COMES TO A RELIESTABLISHMENT PERVERTED TO SELFISHNESS AND SHE IS SHUT OUT.

In Winter's time when hardly fed the flocks,
And icicles hung dangling on the rocks,
When Hyems bound the flocks in silver chains,
And hoary frosts had candied all the plains;
When every barn rung with the thrashing flails,
And shepherds' boys for cold 'gan blow their nails :
Wearied with toil in seeking out some one
That had a spark of true devotion;
It was my chance, chance only helpeth need,
To find an house 'ybuilt for holy deed,
With goodly architect, and cloisters wide,
With groves and walks along a river's side;
The place itself afforded admiration,
And every spray a theme of contemplation.
But, woe is me, when knocking at the gate,
I 'gan to entreat an entrance thereat :
The porter asked my name, I told; he swelled,
And bade me thence; wherewith in grief repelled,

I sought for shelter to a ruined house,
Harboring the weasel, and the dust-bred mouse;
And others none, except the two-kind bat,
Which all the day there melancholy sat;
Here sat I down with wind and rain sore beat,
Grief fed my mind, and did my body eat:
Yet Idleness I saw, lamed with the gout,
Had entrance when poor truth was kept without.
There saw I Drunkenness, with dropsies swollen :
And pampered Lust, that many a night had stolen
Over the abbey-wall when gates were locked,
To be in Venus' wanton bosom rocked:

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By this had Chanticleer, the village cock,
Bidden the good wife for her maids to knock.
And the swart ploughman for his breakfast stayed,
That he might till those lands where fallow laid.
The hills and valleys here and there resound
With the reechoes of the deep-mouthed hound.
Each shepherd's daughter, with her cleanly pail,
Was come a field to milk the morning's meal,
And ere the sun had climbed the eastern hills,
To gild the muttering bournes and pretty rills,
Before the laboring bee had left the hive,
And nimble fishes, which in rivers dive,
Began to leap, and catch the drowned fly-
I rose from rest, not in felicity.

TRUTH'S UNSUCCESSFUL SEARCH AFTER AID AND COMFORT.
APPLIES TO GREATNESS; THE CITY; THE COUNTRY.-
THE MILLER'S, WEAVER'S, TAILOR'S ANSWERS.
Seeking the place of Charity's resort,
Unawares I happened on a prince's court;
Where meeting Greatness, I required relief.
'O, happy undelayed,' she said in brief,
To small effect thine oratory tends
How can I keep thee and so many friends?
If of my household I should make thee one,
Farewell my servant Adulation.

I know she will not stay when thou art there,
But seek some great man's service other where.
Darkness and light, Summer and Winter's weather,
May be at once, ere you two live together.'
Thus with a nod she left me clothed in woe;
Thence to the city once I thought to go,

But somewhat in my mind this thought had thrown,
'It was a place wherein I was not known.'
And therefore went unto these homely towns,
Sweetly environed with the daisied downs.

Upon a stream washing a village end
A mill is placed, that never difference kend
'Twixt days for work, and holy tides for rest,
But always wrought and ground the neighbor's grist.
Before the door I saw the miller walking,
And other two (his neighbors) with him talking.
One of them was a weaver, and the other
The village tailor, and his trusty brother;
To them I came, and thus my suit began:
'Content, the riches of a countryman,
Attend your actions, be more happy still,
Than I am hapless; and as yonder mill,
Though in his turning it obey the stream,
Yet by the headstrong torrent from his beam
Is unremoved, and till the wheel be tore,
It daily toils; then rests, and works no more.
So in life's motion may you never be
(Though swayed with griefs) o'erborne with misery.
With that the miller, laughing, brushed his clothes,
Then swore, by cock and other dunghill oaths,

I greatly was to blame, that durst so wade
Into the knowledge of a wheelwright's trade.
I, neighbor, quoth the tailor (then he bent
His pace to me, spruce like a Jack of Lent),
Your judgment is not seam-rent when you spend it,
Nor is it botching, for I cannot mend it.
And, maiden, let me tell you, in displeasure,
You must not press the cloth you cannot measure :
But let your steps be stitched to wisdom's chalking,
And cast presumptuous shreds out of your walking.
The weaver said, Fie, wench, yourself you wrong,
Thus to let slip the shuttle of your tongue;
For mark me well, yea, mark me well, I say,
I see you work your speech's web astray.
Sad to the soul, o'erlaid with idle words,

O heaven, quoth I, where is the place affords
A friend to help, or any heart that ruth
The most dejected hopes of wronged Truth!
Truth! quoth the miller, plainly for our parts,
I and the weaver hate thee with our hearts;
The strifes raise I will not now discuss,
you
Between our honest customers and us.
But get you gone, for sure you may despair
Of comfort here, seek it some other where.
Maid, quoth the tailor, we no succor owe you,
For, as I guess, here's none of us doth know you;
Nor my remembrance any thought can seize
That I have ever seen you in my days.
Seen you? nay, therein confident I am :
Nay, till this time I never heard your name,
Excepting once, and by this token chief,
My neighbor at that instant called me thief.
By this you see you are unknown among us;
We cannot help you, though your stay may wrong us.

THE BUSY LIFE OF A RILL.

Just half the way this solitary grove,

her,

A crystal spring from either hill-side strove,
Which of them first should woo the meeker ground,
And make the pebbles dance unto their sound.
But as when children having leave to play,
And near the master's eye sport out the day,
Beyond condition, in their childish toys,
Oft vex their tutor with too great a noise,
And make him send some servant out of doors,
To cease their clamor, lest they play no more;
So when the pretty rill a place espies,
Where with the pebbles she would wantonize;
And that her upper stream so much doth wrong
To drive her thence, and let her play no longer,
If she with too loud muttering ran away,
As being much incensed to leave her play;
A western, mild, and pretty whispering gale,
Came dallying with the leaves along the dale,
And seemed as with the water it did chide,
Because it ran so long unpacified.
Yea, and methought it bade her leave that coil,
Or he would choke her up with leaves and soil;
Whereat the rivulet in my mind did weep,
And hurled her head into a silent deep.

THE FOUR SEASONS.

And as the year hath first his jocund Spring, Wherein the leaves, to birds' sweet carolling, Dance with the wind; then sees the Summer's day Perfect the embryon blossom of each spray. Next cometh Autumn, when the threshed sheaf Loseth his grain, and every tree his leaf. Lastly, cold Winter's rage, with many a storm, Threats the proud pines which Ida's top adorn, And makes the sap leave succorless the shoot, Shrinking to comfort his decaying root. *

THE EFFECT OF REMORSE UPON RIOT COMPARED TO A HORSE-SHOEING.

When Riot came, the lady's pains nigh done,
She passed the gate, and then Remorse began
To fetter Riot in strong iron chains;

And doubting much his patience in the pains,
As when a smith and 's man (lame Vulcan's fellows)
Called from the anvil or the puffing bellows,
To clap a well-wrought shoe, for more than pay,
Upon a stubborn nag of Galloway;
Or unbacked jennet, or a Flanders mare,
That at the forge stand sniffing of the air.
The swarthy smith spits in his buckhorn fist,
And bids his men bring out the five-fold twist,
His shackles, shacklocks, hampers, gyves and chains,
His linked bolts; and with no little pains
These make him fast; and lest all these should falter,
Unto a post with some six-doubled halter
He binds his head; yet all are of the least
To curb the fury of the headstrong beast;
When if a carrier's jade be brought unto him,
His man can hold his foot whilst he can shoe him.
Remorse was so enforced to bind him stronger,
Because his faults required infliction longer,
Than any sin-pressed wight which many a day,
Since Judas hung himself, had passed that way.

THE ANGLER.

Now as an angler melancholy standing Upon a green bank yielding room for landing, A wriggling yellow worm thrust on his hook, Now in the midst he throws, then in a nook ; Here pulls his line, there throws it in again, Mending his crook and bait, - but all in vain, He long stands viewing of the curled stream; At last a hungry pike, or well-grown bream, Snatch at the worm, and hasting fast away, He knowing it a fish of stubborn sway, Pulls up his rod, but soft, as having skill; Wherewith the hook fast holds the fish's gill. Then all his line he freely yieldeth him, Whilst furiously all up and down doth swim The ensnared fish; here on the top doth scud, There underneath the banks, then in the mud; And with his frantic fits so scares the shoal, That each one takes his hide or starting hole : By this the pike clean wearied, underneath A willow lies, and pants (if fishes breathe), Wherewith the angler gently pulls him to him,

And lest his haste might happen to undo him,
Lays down his rod, then takes his line in hand,
And by degrees getting the fish to land,
Walks to another pool at length is winner
Of such a dish as serves him for his dinner.

SQUIRREL AND BOYS IN CHASE.

Then, as a nimble squirrel from the wood, Ranging the hedges for his filbert food, Sits partly on a bough his brown nuts cracking, And from the shell the sweet white kernel taking, Till, with their crooks and bags, a sort of boys, To share with him, come with so great a noise, That he is forced to leave a nut nigh broke, And for his life leap to a neighbor oak; Thence to a beech, thence to a row of ashes; Whilst through the quagmires and red water plashes The boys run dabbling on through thick and thin; One tears his hose, another breaks his shin; This, torn and tattered, hath with much ado Got by the briers; and that hath lost his shoe; This drops his band; that headlong falls for haste; Another cries behind for being last :

With sticks and stones and many a sounding hollow, The little fool with no small sport they follow; Whilst he, from tree to tree, from spray to spray, Gets to the wood, and hides him in his dray. **

RIOT TRANSFORMED BY REPENTANCE COMPARED TO A

MAIDEN UNDRESSING FOR BED.

And as a lonely maiden, pure and chaste, With naked, ivory neck, and gown unlaced, Within her chamber, when the day is fled, Makes poor her garments to enrich her bed : First puts she off her lily silken gown, That shrieks for sorrow as she lays it down; And with her arms graceth a waistcoat fine, Embracing her as it would ne'er untwine. Her flaxen hair ensnaring all beholders, She next permits to wave about her shoulders, And though she cast it back, the silken slips Still forward steal, and hang upon her lips; Whereat she, sweetly angry, with her laces Binds up the wanton locks in curious traces, [gers, Whilst twisting with her joints each hair long linAs loath to be enchained but with her fingers. Then on her head a dressing like a crown ; Her breasts all bare, her kirtle slipping down, And all things off (which rightly ever be Called the foul-fair marks of our misery) Except her last, which enviously doth seize her, Lest any eye partake with it in pleasure, Prepares for sweetest rest, while sylvans greet her, And longingly the down bed swells to meet her. So by degrees his shape, all brutish wild, Fell from him, as loose skin from some young child; In lieu whereof a man-like shape appears, And gallant youth scarce skilled in twenty years, So fair, so fresh, so young, so admirable In every part, that since I am not able

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