Page:Once a Week Volume V.djvu/524

 . 12, 1861.] village?” perhaps you may ask, Smith and Brown, my old friends.

For the good of you, and such as you, I answer—I speak as a Cockney by domicile (for I fear I have no animus revertendi from London, although born and bred in a country village). Oh, brother Cockney, if you have never tried the peace and quiet of a two or three months’ residence in a real English country village,—not one of your villages which abound with “Anastatia Villas” and “Laurel Lodges,”—take my advice, and do so at no distant period. You would feel yourselves humanised by living in a place where your fast London stories and scandal would fall dead on every ear, and where you would, if simple and unaffected in your manners, receive a cheerful greeting from high and low. If you have a heart to sympathise with the pleasures of others, it would do you good to see and hear the village children play and laugh upon the green; and if you feel lazy, why, you could sit in your garden in an easy chair, and sleep very comfortably under the influence of the humming of the bees, and the music from the blacksmith’s forge.

The Smiths and Browns who go abroad, or to watering-places for the sake of quiet and health, are to be respected for their motives; but I think if the Smiths and Browns who rush abroad, or go to some fashionable place of resort, for the sole purpose of changing the venue of London dissipation, and who hope to acquire by a twopenny-halfpenny gentility a grandeur which is not their own, were transported for a short period to some quiet country village, they would come back to London with better health and better morals than they can possibly acquire by swaggering about and bullying Continental landlords, or by displaying their vulgarity at Brighton or Scarborough.

F. G.

, pendant-gabled, broad, It stood beside an ancient road, By squire, and hind, and farmer trod.

The Tudors from the stones did speak; The quoins were curled in fret and freak, With griffin’s head and vulture’s beak.

Red glowed the roof in crimson tiles, From ridge to eave; save where, in whiles, The black rain blurred the channelled aisles.

And all around brown mosses clung, And blossomed trailers looped and swung, From crocket-tops, where linnets sung.

The diamond sashes of each room Were half turned back into the gloom, And muffled half in jasmine bloom;

Great honeysuckle blooms that share A jealous odour with the air When noons are wet, and April’s fair.

High at the chamber windows stood Three flower-pots, as red as blood, With precious plants in leaf and bud.

All day within the chambers old Great squares of sunlight paved with gold The floor, and upward, slantwise, rolled;

Touched the brown portraits, thick with dust, The helmet, black with battle rust, And scent-jars, rich in Indian must.

Under the vane-top, slim and hoar, A cracked clock beat for evermore; Three elm-trees sentinelled the door.

A broken dial; and beyond, The fresh brim of the cattle pond, Hidden in weed and elder frond.

Thereby, on benches in the sun, When half the day to rest had run, The gossips chattered, smocked and brown.

Plump was mine host, and pleasant-faced, Given to laughter, sober-paced, His keybunch jangling at his waist.

He leans across the garden rail, His right hand cupped with yellow ale, To tell his guests the latest tale

Of busy London. Close behind His brave head, shiver in the wind, The privet blossoms white and kind.

And right and left the highway goes, A streakèd glare that winds and flows By streamlet edge and hamlet rows.

Thence, looking westward, you might see,see [sic] Broad tracts of corn and purple lea, And windmills whirring dreamily.

The low manse with its crooked eaves, Black in the dusk of walnut leaves, And the gold lights of wheaten sheaves.

The night is cold. Above, below, On window-sill and poplar row, A blank, bright glory falls the snow.

Or, lifted by the warring wind, There glimmer on the window blind, Three elm-trees, with the moon behind.

A moment there, with branches crossed, They glimmer keener than the frost, And then, in sudden gloom, are lost.

Beside me, couched in fireside ease, Dreaming, the miller sleeps and sees His dead child sitting on his knees.

The bearded fiddler doses near, Nods to-and-fro; starts up with fear, Searching the room with eyes severe,

And hearing nothing but the din Of stormed roofs, sleeps, his fingers thin Beating a phantom violin.

Keen-witted, cunning, trinket-wise, Full stretched, the footsore pedlar lies, His broad hand clasped across his eyes.

Anon, the courtyard door swings back, And, thickly-snowed, on head and back, In trots the miller’s mastiff Jack.