Page:Journals of Dorothy Wordsworth (Macmillan, 1897) (IA cu31924104001478).pdf/180

 Nothing else in colour was distinct and separate, but all the beautiful colours seemed to be melted into one another, and joined together in one mass, so that there were no differences, though an endless variety, when one tried to find it out. The fields were of one sober yellow brown

Tuesday, 2nd November.—William returned from Keswick.

Friday, 5th.— I wrote to Montagu and sent off letters to Miss Lamb and Coleridge

Sunday, 7th.—Fine weather. Letters from Coleridge that he was gone to London. Sara at Penrith. I wrote to Mrs. Clarkson. William began to translate Ariosto.

Monday, 8th.—A beautiful day. William got to work again at Ariosto, and so continued all the morning, though the day was so delightful that it made my very heart long to be out of doors, and see and feel the beauty of the autumn in freedom. The trees on the opposite side of the lake are of a yellow brown, but there are one or two trees opposite our windows (an ash tree, for instance) quite green, as in spring. The fields are of their winter colour, but the island is as green as ever it was William is writing out his stanzas from Ariosto The evening is quiet. Poor Coleridge! Sara is at Keswick, I hope I have read one canto of Ariosto to-day

24th December.—Christmas Eve. William is now sitting by me, at half-past ten o'clock. I have been repeating some of his sonnets to him, listening to his own repeating, reading some of Milton's, and the Allegro and Penseroso. It is a quick, keen frost Coleridge came this morning with Wedgwood. We all turned out one by one, to meet him. He looked