The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth
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Chapter 15 : ... and called thee bless'd; The whilst upon some sultry summer's day She dra
... and called thee bless'd; The whilst upon some sultry summer's day She dragged her babes along this weary way; Or taught their limbs along the burning road A few short steps to totter with their load. 1820.
The while ... 1832.]
[Variant 78:
1845.
... a shooting star ... 1793.]
[Variant 79:
1845.
I hear, while in the forest depth he sees, The Moon's fix'd gaze between the opening trees, In broken sounds her elder grief demand, And skyward lift, like one that prays, his hand, If, in that country, where he dwells afar, His father views that good, that kindly star; --Ah me! all light is mute amid the gloom, The interlunar cavern of the tomb. 1793-1832.
In broken sounds her elder child demand, While toward the sky he lifts his pale bright hand, 1836.
--Alas! all light ... 1836.
Those eight lines were withdrawn in 1845.]
[Variant 80:
1836.
... painful ... 1793.]
[Variant 81:
1820.
The distant clock forgot, and chilling dew, Pleas'd thro' the dusk their breaking smiles to view,
Only in the edition of 1793.]
[Variant 82:
1836.
... on her lap to play Delighted, with the glow-worm's harmless ray Toss'd light from hand to hand; while on the ground Small circles of green radiance gleam around. 1793.]
[Variant 83:
1836.
Oh! when the bitter showers her path a.s.sail, And roars between the hills the torrent gale, 1793.
... sleety showers ... 1827.]
[Variant 84:
1827.
Scarce heard, their chattering lips her shoulder chill, And her cold back their colder bosoms thrill; All blind she wilders o'er the lightless heath, Led by Fear's cold wet hand, and dogg'd by Death; Death, as she turns her neck the kiss to seek, Breaks off the dreadful kiss with angry shriek.
s.n.a.t.c.h'd from her shoulder with despairing moan, She clasps them at that dim-seen roofless stone.-- "Now ruthless Tempest launch thy deadliest dart!
Fall fires--but let us perish heart to heart." 1793.
The first, third, and fourth of these couplets were omitted from the edition of 1820. The whole pa.s.sage was withdrawn in 1827.]
[Variant 85:
1820.
Soon shall the Light'ning hold before thy head His torch, and shew them slumbering in their bed,
Only in the edition of 1793.]
[Variant 86:
1820.
While, by the scene compos'd, the breast subsides, Nought wakens or disturbs it's tranquil tides; Nought but the char that for the may-fly leaps, And breaks the mirror of the circling deeps; Or clock, that blind against the wanderer born Drops at his feet, and stills his droning horn.
--The whistling swain that plods his ringing way Where the slow waggon winds along the bay; The sugh [v] of swallow flocks that twittering sweep, The solemn curfew swinging long and deep; The talking boat that moves with pensive sound, Or drops his anchor down with plunge profound; Of boys that bathe remote the faint uproar, And restless piper wearying out the sh.o.r.e; These all to swell the village murmurs blend, That soften'd from the water-head descend.
While in sweet cadence rising small and still The far-off minstrels of the haunted hill, As the last bleating of the fold expires, Tune in the mountain dells their water lyres.
Only in the edition of 1793.]
[Variant 87:
1845.
... of the night; 1793.]
[Variant 88:
1815.
Thence, from three paly loopholes mild and small, Slow lights upon the lake's still bosom fall, 1793.]