The Complete Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge: Poems, Plays, Essays, Lectures, Autobiography & Personal Letters (Illustrated). Samuel Taylor Coleridge
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СКАЧАТЬ is a blessing in the air,

       Which seems a sense of joy to yield

       To the bare trees, and mountains bare,

       And grass in the green field.

      My Sister! (‘tis a wish of mine)

       Now that our morning meal is done,

       Make haste, your morning task resign;

       Come forth and feel the sun.

      Edward will come with you, and pray,

       Put on with speed your woodland dress,

       And bring no book, for this one day

       We’ll give to idleness.

      No joyless forms shall regulate

       Our living Calendar:

       We from to-day, my friend, will date

       The opening of the year.

      Love, now an universal birth.

       From heart to heart is stealing,

       From earth to man, from man to earth,

       — It is the hour of feeling.

      One moment now may give us more

       Than fifty years of reason;

       Our minds shall drink at every pore

       The spirit of the season.

      Some silent laws our hearts may make,

       Which they shall long obey;

       We for the year to come may take

       Our temper from to-day.

      And from the blessed power that rolls

       About, below, above;

       We’ll frame the measure of our souls,

       They shall be tuned to love.

      Then come, my sister! come, I pray,

       With speed put on your woodland dress,

       And bring no book; for this one day

       We’ll give to idleness.

       Table of Contents

      In the sweet shire of Cardigan,

       Not far from pleasant Ivor-hall,

       An old man dwells, a little man,

       I’ve heard he once was tall.

       Of years he has upon his back,

       No doubt, a burthen weighty;

       He says he is three score and ten,

       But others say he’s eighty.

      A long blue livery-coat has he,

       That’s fair behind, and fair before;

       Yet, meet him where you will, you see

       At once that he is poor.

       Full five and twenty years he lived

       A running huntsman merry;

       And, though he has but one eye left,

       His cheek is like a cherry.

      No man like him the horn could sound.

       And no man was so full of glee;

       To say the least, four counties round

       Had heard of Simon Lee;

       His master’s dead, and no one now

       Dwells in the hall of Ivor;

       Men, dogs, and horses, all are dead;

       He is the sole survivor.

      His hunting feats have him bereft

       Of his right eye, as you may see:

       And then, what limbs those feats have left

       To poor old Simon Lee!

       He has no son, he has no child,

       His wife, an aged woman,

       Lives with him, near the waterfall,

       Upon the village common.

      And he is lean and he is sick,

       His little body’s half awry

       His ancles they are swoln and thick

       His legs are thin and dry.

       When he was young he little knew

       Of husbandry or tillage;

       And now he’s forced to work, though weak,

       — The weakest in the village.

      He all the country could outrun,

       Could leave both man and horse behind;

       And often, ere the race was done,

       He reeled and was stone-blind.

       And still there’s something in the world

       At which his heart rejoices;

       For when the chiming hounds are out,

       He dearly loves their voices!

      Old Ruth works out of doors with him,

       And does what Simon cannot do;

       For she, not over stout of limb,

       Is stouter of the two.

       And though you with your utmost skill

       From labour could not wean them,

       Alas! ‘tis very little, all

       Which they can do between them.

      Beside their moss-grown hut of clay,

       Not twenty paces from the door,

       A scrap of land they have, but they

       Are poorest of the poor.

СКАЧАТЬ