"LOOK down the road. You see that mound
Rise on the right, its grassy round
Broken as by a scar?"
Where every landscape-lover should, High on the gray old belfry's lead, Scored with rude names, and to the tread Waved like a sea. Below us spread
Cool grave-stones, watched by one great yew. To right were ricks; thatched roofs a few; Next came the rectory, with its lawn And nestling schoolhouse; next, withdrawn Beyond a maze of apple boughs,
The long, low-latticed Manor-house. The wide door showed an antlered hall; Then, over roof and chimney stack, You caught the fish-pond at the back, The roses, and the old red wall. Behind, the Dorset ridges go
With straggling, wind-clipped trees, and so The eye came down the slope to follow The white road winding in the hollow Beside the mound of which he spoke.)
"There," said the Rector, " from the town The Roundheads rode across the down. Sir Miles-'twas then Sir Miles's dayWas posted farther south, and lay Watching at Weymouth; but his sonRupert by name—an only one, The veriest youth, it would appear, Scrambling about for jackdaws here, Spied them a league off.
Scorning the tedious turret-way
(Or else because the butler's care Had turned the key to keep him there), He slid down by the rain-pipe.
Arming the hinds and serving-men With half-pike and with harquebuss, Snatched from the wainscot's overplus, Himself in rusty steel cap clad, With flapping ear-pieces, the lad Led them by stealth around the ridge, So flanked the others at the bridge. They were just six to half a score, And yet five crop-ears, if not more, Sleep in that mound. But, sad to tell, The boy, by some stray petronel, Or friend's or foe's-report is vague- Was killed; and then, for fear of plague, Buried within twelve hours or so.
"Such is the story. Shall we go?
I have his portrait here below: Grave, olive-cheeked, a Southern face.
His mother, who was dead, had been Something, I think, about the Queen, Long ere the day of that disgrace, Saddest our England yet has seen. Poor child! The last of all his race."
THE PHILOSOPHY OF THE PORCH
"Cultivons notre jardin.”—VOLTAIRE
CROSS my Neighbour's waste of whins For roods the rabbit burrows;
You scarce can see where first begins
His range of steaming furrows;
I am not sad that he is great,
He does not ask my pardon;
Beside his wall I cultivate
My modest patch of garden.
envy not my Neighbour's trees; To me it nowise matters
Whether in east or western breeze
His "dry-tongued laurel patters." Me too the bays become; but still, I sleep without narcotics,
Though he should bind his brows at will With odorous exotics.
Let Goodman Greenfat, glad to dine, With true bon-vivant's benison, Extol my Neighbour's wit and wine- His virtue and his venison:
I care not! Still for me the gorse Will blaze about the thicket; The Common's purblind pauper horse Will peer across my wicket;
For me the geese will thread the furze, In hissing file, to follow
The tinker's sputtering wheel that whirs Across the breezy hollow;
And look, where smoke of gipsy huts Curls blue against the bushes— That little copse is famed for nuts, For nightingales and thrushes!
But hark! I hear my Neighbour's drums!
Some dreary deputation
Of Malice or of Wonder comes
In guise of Adulation.
Poor Neighbour! Though you "call the tune," One little pinch of care is Enough to clog a whole balloon Of aura popularis;
Not amulets, nor epiderm
As tough as armadillo's,
Can shield you if Suspicion worm Between your poppied pillows; And though on ortolans you sup, Beside you shadowy sitters Can pour in your ungenial cup Unstimulating bitters.
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