The Chough


The Cornish Chough

Where not a sound is heard

But the white waves, 0 bird,

And slippery rocks fling back the vanquish'd sea,

Thou soarest in thy pride,

Not heeding storm or tide;

In Freedom's temple nothing is more free.

'T is pleasant by this stone,

Sea-wash'd and weed-o'ergrown,

With Solitude and Silence at my side,

To list the solemn roar

Of ocean on the shore,

And up the beetling cliff to see thee glide.

Though harsh thy earnest cry.

On crag, or shooting high

Above the tumult of this dusty sphere

Thou tellest of the steep

Where Peace and Quiet sleep,

And noisy man but rarely visits here.

For this I love thee, bird.

And feel my pulses stirr'd

To see thee grandly on the high air ride,

Or float along the land,

Or drop upon the sand,

Or perch within the gully's frowning side.

Thou bringest the sweet thought

Of some straw-cover'd cot,

On the lone moor beside the bubbling well,

Where cluster wife and child,

And bees hum o'er the wild:

In this seclusion it were joy to dwell.

Will such a quiet bower

Be ever more my dower

In this rough region of perpetual strife?

I like a bird from home

Forward and backward roam;

But there is rest beneath the Tree of Life.

In this dark world of din,

Of selfishness and sin,

Help me, dear Saviour, on Thy love to rest;

That, having cross'd life's sea,

My shatter'd bark may be

Moor'd safely in the haven of the blest.

The Muse at this sweet hour

Hies with me to my bower

Among the heather of my native hill;

The rude rock-hedges here

And mossy turf, how dear!

What gushing song! how fresh the moors and still!

No spot of earth like thee,

So full of heaven to me,

O hill of rock, piled to the passing cloud!

Good spirits in their flight

Upon thy crags alight,

And leave a glory where they brightly bow'd.

I well remember now,

In boy-days on thy brow,

When first my lyre among thy larks I found,

Stealing from mother's side

Out on the common wide,

Strange Druid footfalls seem'd to echo round.

Dark Cornish chough, for thee

My shred of minstrelsy

I carol at this meditative hour,

Linking thee with my reed,

Grey moor and grassy mead,

Dear carn and cottage, heathy bank and bower. 


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