A Summer Noon

by William Howitt English

Who has not dreamed a world of bliss On a bright sunny noon like this, Couched by his native brook’s green maze, With comrade of his boyish days, While all around them seemed to be Just as in joyous infancy? Who has not loved, at such an hour, Upon that heath, in birchen bower, Lulled in the poet’s dreamy mood, Its wild and sunny solitude? While o’er the waste of purple ling You mark a sultry glimmering; Silence herself there seems to sleep, Wrapped in a slumber long and deep, Where slowly stray those lonely sheep Through the tall foxglove’s crimson bloom, And gleaming of the scattered broom. Love you not, then, to list and hear The crackling of the gorse-flowers near, Pouring an orange-scented tide Of fragrance o’er the desert wide? To hear the buzzard’s whimpering shrill, Hovering above you high and still? The twittering of the bird that dwells Among the heath’s delicious bells? While round your bed, o’er fern and blade, Insects in green and gold arrayed, The sun’s gay tribes have lightly strayed; And sweeter sound their humming wings Than the proud minstrel’s echoing strings.

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