Here you will find the Long Poem Worth Forest of poet Wilfrid Scawen Blunt
Come, Prudence, you have done enough to--day-- The worst is over, and some hours of play We both have earned, even more than rest, from toil; Our minds need laughter, as a spent lamp oil, And after their long fast a recompense. How sweet the evening is with its fresh scents Of briar and fern distilled by the warm wind! How green a robe the rain has left behind! How the birds laugh!--What say you to a walk Over the hill, and our long promised talk About the rights and wrongs of infancy? Our patients are asleep, dear angels, she Holding the boy in her ecstatic arms, As mothers do, and free from past alarms, The child grown calm. If we, an hour or two, Venture to leave them, 'tis but our hope's due. My tongue is all agog to try its speed To a new listener, like a long--stalled steed Loosed in a meadow, and the Forest lies At hand, the theme of its best flatteries. See, Prudence, here, your hat, where it was thrown The night you found me in the house alone With my worst fear and these two helpless things. Please God, that worst has folded its black wings, And we may let our thoughts on pleasure run Some moments in the light of this good sun. They sleep in Heaven's guard. Our watch to--night Will be the braver for a transient sight-- The only one perhaps more fair than they-- Of Nature dressed for her June holiday. This is the watershed between the Thames And the South coast. On either hand the streams Run to the great Thames valley and the sea, The Downs, which should oppose them, servilely Giving them passage. Who would think these Downs, Which look like mountains when the sea--mist crowns Their tops in autumn, were so poor a chain? Yet they divide no pathways for the rain, Nor store up waters, in this pluvious age, More than the pasteboard barriers of a stage. The crest lies here. From us the Medway flows To drain the Weald of Kent, and hence the Ouse Starts for the Channel at Newhaven. Both These streams run eastward, bearing North and South. But, to the West, the Adur and the Arun Rising together, like twin rills of Sharon, Go forth diversely, this through Shoreham gap, And that by Arundel to Ocean's lap. All are our rivers, by our Forest bred, And one besides which with more reverend heed We need to speak, for her desert is great Beyond the actual wealth of her estate. For Spenser sang of her, the River Mole, And Milton knew her name, though he, poor soul, Had never seen her, as I think being blind, And so miscalled her sullen. Others find Her special merit to consist in this: A maiden coyness, and her shy device Of mole--like burrowing. And in truth her way Is hollowed out and hidden from the day, Under deep banks and the dark overgrowth Of knotted alder roots and stumps uncouth, From source to mouth; and once at Mickleham, She fairly digs her grave, in deed and name, And disappears. There is an early trace Of this propensity to devious ways Shown by the little tributary brook Which bounds our fields, for lately it forsook Its natural course, to burrow out a road Under an ash tree in its neighbourhood. But whether this a special virtue is, Or like some virtues but a special vice, We need not argue. This at least is true, That in the Mole are trout, and many too, As I have often proved with rod and line From boyhood up, blest days of pins and twine! How many an afternoon have our hushed feet Crept through the alders where the waters meet, Mary's and mine, and our eyes viewed the pools Where the trout lay, poor unsuspecting fools, And our hands framed their doom,--while overhead His orchestra of birds the backbird led. In those lost days, no angler of them all Could boast our cunning with the bait let fall, Close to their snouts, from some deceiving coigne, Or mark more notches when we stopped to join Our fishes head to tail and lay them out Upon the grass, and count our yards of trout. 'Twas best in June, with the brook growing clear After a shower, as now. In dark weather It was less certain angling, for the stream Was truly ``sullen'' then, so deep and dim. 'Tis thus in mountain lakes, as some relate, Where the fish need the sun to see the bait. The fly takes nothing in these tangled brooks, But grief to fishermen and loss of hooks; And all our angling was of godless sort, With living worm,--and yet we loved the sport. But wait. This path will lead us to the gill, Where you shall see the Mole in her first rill, Ere yet she leaves the Forest, and her bed Is still of iron--stone, which stains her red, Yet keeps her pure and lends a pleasant taste To her young waters as they bubble past. You hear her lapping round the barren flanks Of these old heaps we call the ``Cinder--banks,'' Where