BEAUTIFULLY DRAWN BY THE REV. WILLIAM BREE, AND IN
THE POSSESSION OF THE REV, HENRY WHITE
AFTER a lonely course thro' yon deep woods, And the green quietness of distant vales, Now, gentle River, to the haunts of men
The rude, stone arches, stretching o'er thy flood, Note thine approach ;—and, as with silent course, Thou glidest under them, the staid old cow And lumpish horse above, are driven a-field By time-worn herdsman. Then, in swifter course, Thy lately tranquil streams, jocund and loud, Rush down the wier.-Again, soon calm'd, they flow, And the young day shines on their glassy train.
So dost thou wander by the pleasant base Of a clean village, climbing up the steep
And shrubby knoll; while, bosom'd in thick trees, The church the hill-top crowns.-The day is young; Clos'd yonder cottage door; the din and hum Of clamorous infants and laborious man, Unheard as yet; tho' from the chimney-tops The grey smoke, rising to the church-yard trees, Curls its light vapours round the boughs, and gives Promise of morning-meal.—Behold the cart, That late, well loaded, on thy pebbled bank Had creak'd and crept, at the yet silent mill Stopt; those kind stores resigning, which shall soon Employ thy loit'ring waters, and awake
The clattering hubbub of the busy scene. Adown those rocky stairs, which to thy brink Lead from the hamlet cots, ere while shall step, With cleanly pail, light rocking on her head, The rustic maid, new risen; for she has seen Thro' lattice, curtain'd by the briar-rose, Her cow, slow pacing up thy left-hand bank, Intelligent of hour; the burden rich Duteous to yield ;—and, yet more welcome, sees, Not far behind, the youth belov❜d, from cops'd And hay-stack'd tenement, down in the vale. Yes, and thou soon shalt hear the tender vows Of true love breath'd; and breath'd in sweeter sound Than song of linnet, or the quiet tune
Of thine own stream, when hush'd are all the woods. Mark that clos'd door, for it shall ope ere long;
It is the good Dame's school;-and in shall creep, Like bees in spring-time to their dusky hive, The little troop, and in resembling hum Mutter the morning task;-but when yon tower Shall tell, far heard, the welcome tale of noon, Some striding, and some tumbling o'er the sill, The infant-tribe releas'd, with clamour loud, Shall totter down, and on thy shelving bank Shout, laugh, and squabble, strenuous while they hurl The frequent stone, dividing thy smooth waves. But on the morrow Sabbath-bells shall ring, And 'twixt the matin and the vesper hour, And at the rosy setting of the sun, That little, lawless multitude, which late, Noisy and wild, had clamour'd on thy brink, In Sunday vestment, and with sober gait, Walk by their parent's side, while from each hand The varied posies, dappled pink and rose, Woodbine, and fragrant southernwood and thyme, Scent the wide air. Leisure and quietness, Apparel clean, and vacant looks, all speak The sacred day of rest; and thou shalt bear, From that wood-mantled tower, the holy chimes, Silver'd and mellow'd on thy liquid course,
To neighbouring farm, or cottage. There we trust Right welcome is the sound; more welcome still The Pastor's voice persuasive, when he speaks Of hopes eternal. Charitable deeds
Shedding a daily beauty on his life
That makes his doctrines saintly; while combin'd They form a picture, delicate of trait,
Soft as the scene now mirror'd in thy breast; While the soft scene, and thou, its mirror clear, Are all the sweet creation of his hand
Whose touch is genius, and whose life is love.
1. 7. Life is love-Mr Bree's scenes are his own creation, since he seldom draws from Nature, and never from copies.
MISS HONORA SMITH OF LICHFIELD.*
SCREEN'D, dear HONORA, by that icy veil Of virgin modesty, incessant worn, What playful wit, what plastic genius dwell Coy glancing sun-beams of thy April morn!
Whate'er thy untaught harmonies impart From volant fingers to the answering wires; Or when thy slow strains melt upon the heart, Sweeping each varying chord, as taste inspires,
*This young creature plays every air she catches with full and elegant bass accompaniment, intuitively and spontaneously discovered; also beautiful compositions intirely her own, and this without knowing the names of the notes or the keys.Sept. 1803. She has within this mouth only, begun to learn music scientifically.
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