Here you will find the Long Poem A Defence Of English Spring of poet Alfred Austin
Unnamed, unknown, but surely bred Where Thames, once silver, now runs lead, Whose journeys daily ebb and flow 'Twixt Tyburn and the bells of Bow, You late in learnëd prose have told How, for the happy bards of old, Spring burst upon Sicilian seas, Or blossomed in the Cyclades, But never yet hath deigned to smile On poets of this shivering isle, Who, when to vernal strains they melt, Discourse of joys they never felt, And, pilfering from each other's page, Pass on the lie from age to age. Well, now in turn give ear to me, Who, with your leave, friend, claim to be, Degenerate, but withal allied, At least on mother Nature's side, To Chaucer, Spenser, Shakespeare, all, Foremost or hindmost, great or small, My kindred, and whose numbers ring With woodnotes of the English Spring: Leave for awhile your polished town, Unto my rural home come down, Where you shall find such bed and board As rude bucolic roofs afford, And judge, with your own ear and eye, If Spring exists, or poets lie. Welcome! Now plunge at once with me Into the nearest copse you see. The boles are brown, the branches gray, Yet green buds live on every spray. But 'tis the ground most wins your gaze, And makes you question, with amaze, What these are! Shells flung far and wide By Winter's now fast-ebbing tide, In language called, for him who sees But grossly, wood-anemones. Those, too? Nay, pluck not. You will find That they maintain a silent mind. You do not understand? I meant They will not talk to you in scent. Sweet violets you know; but these Have their own rustic way to please. Their charm is in their look, their free Unfrightened gaze of gaiety. Are they not everywhere? Their eyes Glance up to the cerulean skies, And challenge them to match the glow Of their own bluer heaven below. Anon the trunks and boughs fall back, And along winding track on track, Lo! wheresoe'er you onward press, Shine milky ways of primroses; So thick, there are, when these have birth, Far fewer stars in heaven than earth. You know them, for their face one meets Still smiling in your London streets; And one I loved, but who with Fame Sleeps quiet now, hath made their name, Even for those, alas! who share No fellowship with woodlands fair, Wherever English speech is heard, A meaning sound, a grateful word. Yet unto me they seem, when there, Like young things that should be elsewhere, In lanes, in dells, in rustic air. But looked on here, where they have space To peep from every sheltered place, Their simple, open faces seem- Or doth again a poet dream?- The wondering soul of child-like Spring, Inquisitive of everything. Now frowns the sky, the air bites bleak, The young boughs rock, the old trunks creak, And fast before the following gale Come slanting drops, then slashing hail, As keen as sword, as thick as shot. Nay, do not cower, but heed them not! For these one neither flies nor stirs; They are but April skirmishers, Thrown out to cover the advance Of gleaming spear and glittering lance, With which the sunshine scours amain Heaven, earth, and air, and routs the rain. See how the sparkling branches sway, And, laughing, shake the drops away, While, glimmering through, the meads beyond Are emerald and diamond. And hark! behind baptismal shower, Whose drops, new-poured on leaf and flower, Unto their infant faces cling, The cuckoo, sponsor of the Spring, Breaks in, and strives, with loud acclaim, To christen it with his own name. Now he begins, he will not cease, Nor leave the woodlands any peace, That have to listen all day long To him reciting his one song. And oft you may, when all is still, And night lies smooth on vale and hill, Hear him call ``Cuckoo!'' in his dream, Still haunted by the egoist theme. Out of the wood now, and we gain, The freedom of the winding lane: Push through the open gap, and leap; What! have you tumbled all aheap? Only a scratch. See! ditch and bank With the same flowers are lush and rank, With more beside. As yet but single, The bluebells with the grasses mingle; But soon their azure will be scrolled Upon the primrose cloth-of-gold. Yes, those are early ladysmocks, The children crumple in their frocks, And carry many a zigzag mile, O'er meadow, footpath, gate, and stile, To stick in pots and jugs to dress Their cottage sills and lattices. As yet they only fleck the grass; But again hither shortly pass, And with them knolls that now are bare Will be a blaze of lavender. What lends yon dingle such a sheen? How! Buttercups? No, celandine. Complete in its own self, each one A looking-glass is for the sun, Soon as his waking hours begin, To see his own