Page:Lyrical ballads, Volume 2, Wordsworth, 1800.djvu/153

145 Here's a Fly, a disconsolate creature perhaps,

A child of the field, or the grove,

And sorrow for him! this dull treacherous heat

Has seduc'd the poor fool from his winter retreat,

And he creeps to the edge of my stove.

Alas! how he fumbles about the domains

Which this comfortless oven environ,

He cannot find out in what track he must crawl,

Now back to the tiles, and now back to the wall,

And now on the brink of the iron.

Stock-still there he stands like a traveller bemaz'd,

The best of his skill he has tried;

His feelers methinks I can see him put forth

To the East and the West, and the South and the North,

But he finds neither guide-post nor guide.