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Little
Dell
Poem
by William
Allingham
Doleful
was the land,
Dull
on, every side,
Neither
soft n'or grand,
Barren,
bleak, and wide;
Nothing
look'd with love;
All
was dingy brown;
The
very skies above
Seem'd
to sulk and frown.
Plodding
sick and sad,
Weary
day on day;
Searching,
never glad,
Many
a miry way;
Poor
existence lagg'd
In
this barren place;
While
the seasons dragg'd
Slowly
o'er its face.
Spring,
to sky and ground,
Came
before I guess'd;
Then
one day I found
A
valley, like a nest!
Guarded
with a spell
Sure
it must have been,
This
little fairy dell
Which
I had never seen.
Open
to the blue,
Green
banks hemm'd it round
A
rillet wander'd through
With
a tinkling sound;
Briars
among the rocks
Tangled
arbours made;
Primroses
in flocks
Grew
beneath their shade.
Merry
birds a few,
Creatures
wildly tame,
Perch'd
and sung and flew;
Timid
field-mice came;
Beetles
in the moss
Journey'd
here and there;
Butterflies
across
Danced
through sunlit air.
There
I often read,
Sung
alone, or dream'd;
Blossoms
overhead,
Where
the west wind stream'd;
Small
horizon-line,
Smoothly
lifted up,
Held
this world of mine
In
a grassy cup.
The
barren land to-day
Hears
my last adieu:
Not
an hour I stay;
Earth
is wide and new.
Yet,
farewell, farewell!
May
the sun and show'rs
Bless
that Little Dell
Of
safe and tranquil hours!
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