
Major Works
by Clare, John; Robinson, Eric; Powell, David; Paulin, Tom-
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Summary
Author Biography
Eric E. Robinson is former Professor of History at the University of Massachusetts, Boston. David D. Powell is retired Senior Librarian at Nene College, Northampton, England. Tom T. Paulin is G. M. Young Lecturer in English Literature, Hertford College at Oxford University.
Table of Contents
Poems of the Helpston period, c.1812-1831 | |
Helpstone | p. 1 |
The setting sun | p. 6 |
Evening ('now grey ey'd hazy eve's begun') | p. 6 |
The gipsies evening blaze | p. 9 |
Epigram | p. 9 |
To a rose bud in humble life | p. 10 |
A scene | p. 11 |
To a winter scene | p. 11 |
The harvest morning | p. 12 |
[Summer evening] | p. 14 |
A maiden-haid | p. 18 |
The lamentations of round-oak waters | p. 18 |
Noon ('all how silent and how still,') | p. 24 |
What is life? | p. 26 |
[Summer] | p. 27 |
Proposals for building a cottage | p. 27 |
[A copse in winter] | p. 28 |
Ballad ('winter winds cold and blea') | p. 29 |
Langley Bush | p. 30 |
Evening bells | p. 31 |
The woodman ('the beating snow clad bell wi sounding dead') | p. 32 |
Childish recollections | p. 38 |
Ballad ('I love thee sweet mary but love thee in fear') | p. 40 |
Recollections after an evening walk | p. 41 |
To my cottage | p. 43 |
Second address to the rose bud in humble life | p. 43 |
Written in November | p. 44 |
[On taste] | p. 45 |
[Summer morning] | p. 45 |
[Joys of youth] | p. 46 |
Song ('swamps of wild rush beds and sloughs squashy traces') | p. 46 |
Song ('and wheres there a scene more delightfully seeming') | p. 47 |
Song ('one gloomy eve I roamd about') | p. 47 |
The Gipseys camp | p. 48 |
From The village minstrel | p. 49 |
Reccolections after a ramble | p. 52 |
My mary | p. 59 |
Helpston green | p. 62 |
The meeting | p. 64 |
[Noon] | p. 65 |
To the winds | p. 65 |
[Patty] | p. 66 |
Rural morning | p. 66 |
Rural evening | p. 70 |
Rustic fishing | p. 74 |
Sunday walks | p. 76 |
The fate of genius | p. 80 |
Winter ('from huddling nights embrace how chill') | p. 83 |
Ballad ('where the dark ivy the thorn tree is mounting') | p. 91 |
To the rural muse ('simple enchantress, wreathd in summer blooms') | p. 92 |
The last of March | p. 93 |
Winter ('the small wind wispers thro the leafless hedge') | p. 96 |
To a fallen elm | p. 96 |
From The parish | p. 98 |
Sudden shower | p. 102 |
Home pictures in May | p. 102 |
The wheat ripening | p. 103 |
Careless rambles | p. 103 |
To the rural muse ('muse of the fields oft have I said farewell') | p. 104 |
[Bloomfield I] | p. 108 |
[Bloomfield II] | p. 108 |
[Woodland thoughts] | p. 109 |
Impulses of spring | p. 109 |
The old willow | p. 113 |
From Childhood ('the past it is a magic word') | p. 113 |
Sport in the meadows | p. 120 |
Wild bees | p. 121 |
Songs eternity | p. 122 |
Summer images | p. 124 |
November ('sybil of months and worshiper of winds') | p. 130 |
The lady flye | p. 130 |
Autumn ('autumn comes laden with her ripened load') | p. 131 |
Nutting | p. 131 |
The woodman ('now evening comes and from the new laid hedge') | p. 132 |
Hay making | p. 132 |
The cottager | p. 133 |
The Shepherd's calendar : June | p. 135 |
The Shepherd's calendar : November | p. 139 |
The heath | p. 145 |
[Winter in the fens] | p. 146 |
[The lament of Swordy Well] | p. 147 |
The progress of rhyme | p. 153 |
Autumn ('syren of sullen moods and fading hues') | p. 161 |
The eternity of nature | p. 165 |
The mores | p. 167 |
Pleasant places | p. 169 |
Shadows of taste | p. 170 |
St. Martins eve | p. 174 |
To P | p. 180 |
Emmonsales heath | p. 181 |
The summer shower | p. 183 |
Love and memory | p. 187 |
Insects | p. 189 |
Sabbath bells | p. 190 |
Peggy band | p. 191 |
An idle hour | p. 193 |
The flood | p. 193 |
Labours leisure | p. 194 |
Mist in the meadows | p. 195 |
Signs of winter | p. 195 |
Angling | p. 196 |
Winter fields | p. 198 |
Winter evening | p. 199 |
Snow storm | p. 199 |
[Showers] | p. 200 |
The meadow grass | p. 200 |
The pasture | p. 203 |
Bird poems | |
To the snipe | p. 205 |
Birds nests ('how fresh the air the birds how busy now') | p. 207 |
Sand martin | p. 208 |
On seeing two swallows late in October | p. 208 |
The fern owls nest | p. 209 |
The March nightingale | p. 210 |
The thrushes nest | p. 210 |
The wren | p. 211 |
The happy bird | p. 211 |
Emmonsails heath in winter | p. 212 |
The firetails nest | p. 212 |
The wrynecks nest | p. 213 |
The nightingales nest | p. 213 |
The sky lark | p. 215 |
The sky lark leaving her nest | p. 216 |
The ravens nest | p. 218 |
The moorehens nest | p. 219 |
Sedge birds nest | p. 221 |
[Crows in spring] | p. 222 |
The robins nest | p. 223 |
The autumn robin | p. 225 |
The pettichaps nest | p. 229 |
The yellowhammers nest | p. 230 |
The yellow wagtails nest | p. 231 |
Partridge coveys | p. 232 |
The blackcap | p. 232 |
Hedge sparrow | p. 233 |
The landrail | p. 233 |
The reed bird | p. 235 |
The woodlarks nest | p. 235 |
Field cricket | p. 236 |
['And often from the rustling sound'] | p. 237 |
[The fens] | p. 238 |
['And yonder by the circling stack'] | p. 241 |
['High overhead that silent throne'] | p. 241 |
[Autumn evening] | p. 241 |
[Birds in alarm] | p. 242 |
['In the hedge I pass a little nest'] | p. 242 |
Animal poems | |
Hares at play | p. 244 |
[The marten] | p. 244 |
[The fox] | p. 245 |
[The badger] | p. 246 |
[The tame badger] | p. 247 |
[The hedgehog] | p. 248 |
[The vixen] | p. 249 |
Poems of the Northborough period, 1832-1837 | |
The flitting | p. 250 |
Decay a ballad | p. 256 |
Remembrances | p. 258 |
['Ive ran the furlongs to thy door'] | p. 261 |
['The hoar frost lodges on every tree'] | p. 262 |
[The mouse's nest] | p. 263 |
[Sheep in winter] | p. 263 |
['The seeding done the fields are still at morn'] | p. 263 |
[Wild bees' nest] | p. 264 |
[Storm in the fens] | p. 264 |
[The fen] | p. 265 |
[Autumn morning] | p. 266 |
[November] | p. 266 |
[Autumn birds] | p. 267 |
[Farmer's boy] | p. 267 |
['With hook tucked neath his arm that now and then'] | p. 267 |
[The squirrel's nest] | p. 268 |
[Quail's nest] | p. 268 |
[Morris dancers] | p. 269 |
['A hugh old tree all wasted to a shell'] | p. 269 |
[Stone pit] | p. 270 |
[Wild duck's nest] | p. 270 |
['The schoolboys in the morning soon as drest'] | p. 271 |
[The green woodpecker's nest] | p. 271 |
[Woodpecker's nest] | p. 272 |
[The puddock's nest] | p. 272 |
[The groundlark] | p. 273 |
[Turkeys] | p. 273 |
[Rook's nest] | p. 274 |
['The old pond full of flags and fenced around'] | p. 275 |
[Dyke side] | p. 275 |
[The partridge] | p. 276 |
[The crane's nest] | p. 276 |
[The nuthatch] | p. 276 |
[The partridge's nest] | p. 277 |
Poems written in Epping Forest and Northampton Asylum, 1837-1864 | |
The water lilies | p. 278 |
The gipsy camp | p. 278 |
Child Harold | p. 279 |
Don Juan a poem | p. 318 |
['Tis martinmass from rig to rig'] | p. 326 |
['Lord hear my prayer when trouble glooms'] | p. 327 |
Spring ('the sweet spring now is come'ng') | p. 328 |
Song last day | p. 330 |
['The red bagged bee on never weary wing'] | p. 331 |
['Summer is on the earth and in the sky'] | p. 331 |
Song ('the bird cherrys white in the dews o' the morning') | p. 332 |
['The thunder mutters louder and more loud'] | p. 333 |
['Look through the naked bramble and black thorn'] | p. 334 |
['I love the little pond to mark at spring'] | p. 334 |
Spring ('pale sun beams gleam') | p. 334 |
['The wind blows happily on every thing'] | p. 335 |
['God looks on nature with a glorious eye'] | p. 336 |
['I'll come to thee at even tide'] | p. 336 |
['Spring comes and it is may - white as are sheets'] | p. 337 |
Song ('O love is so deceiving') | p. 338 |
Love's pains | p. 338 |
Haymaking | p. 339 |
Song : O wert thou in the storm | p. 340 |
Mary | p. 341 |
To Mary | p. 342 |
A vision | p. 343 |
The droneing bee | p. 343 |
To the lark | p. 344 |
Sonnet ('enough of misery keeps my heart alive') | p. 345 |
A lament | p. 346 |
Song ('a seaboy on the giddy mast') | p. 347 |
Song ('the daiseys golden eye') | p. 347 |
Autumn ('the autumn day it fades away,') | p. 348 |
Sonnet ('the flag top quivers in the breeze,') | p. 349 |
Out of door pleasures | p. 349 |
An invite to eternity | p. 351 |
Sonnet ('the silver mist more lowly swims') | p. 352 |
Morning | p. 352 |
Wild flowers | p. 353 |
The invitation | p. 354 |
Sonnet : the nightingale | p. 355 |
Spring ('how beautiful is spring! : the sun gleams gold,') | p. 356 |
Ballad ('we'll walk among the tedded hay,') | p. 357 |
Evening ('it is the silent hour when they who roam') | p. 358 |
Stanzas | p. 359 |
'I am' | p. 361 |
Sonnet : 'I am' | p. 361 |
Sleep of spring | p. 362 |
Song ('love lives beyond') | p. 363 |
Some days before the spring | p. 364 |
The blackbird | p. 365 |
My early home was this | p. 366 |
Hesperus | p. 367 |
The round oak | p. 367 |
Twilight | p. 368 |
Song ('I fly from all I prize the most') | p. 370 |
Larks and spring | p. 371 |
The autumn wind | p. 372 |
Song ('I would not be a wither'd leaf') | p. 374 |
The winters spring | p. 374 |
Sonnet : wood anemonie | p. 375 |
Sonnet : the crow | p. 376 |
Silent love | p. 376 |
Loves story | p. 377 |
['I love thee nature with a boundless love'] | p. 378 |
['How hot the sun rushes'] | p. 379 |
Song ('tis evening the sky is one broad dim of gray') | p. 380 |
Song ('the rain is come in misty showers') | p. 381 |
Sonnet ('how beautiful the white thorn shews its leaves') | p. 382 |
Autumn ('I love the fitfull gusts that shakes') | p. 382 |
Evening ('how beautiful the eve comes in') | p. 383 |
Song ('the autumns come again') | p. 385 |
Recolections of home | p. 386 |
Boys and spring | p. 387 |
The bean field | p. 388 |
Spring wind | p. 388 |
['There is a charm in solitude that cheers'] | p. 390 |
The shepherd boy | p. 390 |
['Swift goes the sooty swallow o'er the heath'] | p. 391 |
Clock a clay | p. 391 |
The wind | p. 392 |
Song ('I went my Sunday mornings rounds') | p. 393 |
Childhood ('O dear to us ever the scenes of our childhood') | p. 394 |
['O could I be as I have been'] | p. 396 |
Clifford Hill | p. 397 |
First love | p. 398 |
The humble bee | p. 399 |
Little trotty wagtail | p. 401 |
The swallow | p. 401 |
The gardeners bonny daughter | p. 402 |
The red robin | p. 403 |
The ladybird | p. 404 |
The corn craiks rispy song | p. 404 |
Autumn ('the thistle down's flying though the winds are all still') | p. 405 |
The peartree lane | p. 405 |
The crow sat on the willow | p. 406 |
In green grassy places | p. 408 |
The peasant poet | p. 408 |
Lines on 'cowper' | p. 409 |
['The even comes and the crow flies low'] | p. 410 |
['Know God is every where'] | p. 410 |
Song ('I hid my love when young while I') | p. 411 |
Song ('I wish I was where I would be') | p. 411 |
Song ('she tied up her few things') | p. 412 |
Song ('I peeled bits o straws and I got switches too') | p. 413 |
['The dew drops on every blade of grass'] | p. 413 |
The winters come | p. 414 |
Birds : why are ye silent? | p. 415 |
The yellowhammer | p. 417 |
Primroses | p. 417 |
Meet me in the green glen | p. 418 |
Perplexities | p. 419 |
Spring ('in every step we tread appears fresh spring') | p. 419 |
The rawk o' the autumn | p. 421 |
Woman had we never met | p. 421 |
Written in prison | p. 422 |
The maple tree | p. 423 |
The chiming bells | p. 423 |
Mary Helen from the hill | p. 424 |
Born upon an angels breast | p. 425 |
Flow on winding river | p. 426 |
Fragment | p. 427 |
To John Clare | p. 427 |
Birds nests ('Tis spring warm glows the south') | p. 427 |
[Autobiographical passages] | p. 429 |
[Journey out of Essex] | p. 432 |
[The farmer and the vicar] | p. 438 |
[Apology for the poor] | p. 445 |
['If the nessesitys of the poor'] | p. 447 |
['Every farmer is growing into an orator'] | p. 448 |
['I never meddle with politics'] | p. 448 |
['I say what good has been yet done'] | p. 449 |
['Long speeches'] | p. 449 |
['These out of place patriots'] | p. 449 |
['... I fear these tory radicals'] | p. 450 |
[The poor man Versus the rich man] | p. 450 |
[Nature notes] | p. 452 |
[Letter to Messrs Taylor and Hessey, I] | p. 453 |
['I went to take my walk to day'] | p. 455 |
[Letter to Messrs Taylor and Hessey, II] | p. 457 |
['It has been often asserted that young frogs'] | p. 459 |
['Blackbirds and thrushes'] | p. 460 |
['Swallows'] | p. 460 |
['The country people here distinguish'] | p. 460 |
['When woodpeckers are making or boring'] | p. 461 |
['When the young of the nightingale'] | p. 461 |
['I have often been amused with the manners'] | p. 462 |
[Signs of spring] | p. 463 |
[More signs of spring] | p. 465 |
[Letter to Messrs Taylor and Hessey, III] | p. 467 |
['The little robin'] | p. 469 |
[Letter to Messrs Taylor and Hessey, IV] | p. 471 |
['I took a walk'] | p. 474 |
[Hunting pooty shells] | p. 477 |
[Taste] | p. 479 |
[Grammar] | p. 481 |
[Life peerages] | p. 482 |
[Knowledge] | p. 482 |
[Letter to William Hone] | p. 483 |
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