Read Ebook: Tennyson and His Friends by Tennyson Hallam Tennyson Baron Editor
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Ebook has 279 lines and 183450 words, and 6 pages
Uncared for, gird the windy grove, And flood the haunts of hern and crake; Or into silver arrows break The sailing moon in creek and cove.
This small deep channelled brook with sandy bottom--over which one may on any bright day see, as described in "Enid,"
a shoal Of darting fish, that on a summer morn... Come slipping o'er their shadows on the sand, But if a man who stands upon the brink But lift a shining hand against the sun, There is not left the twinkle of a fin Betwixt the cressy islets white with flower--
was very dear to Tennyson. When in his "Ode to Memory" he bids Memory
Come from the woods which belt the gray hillside, The seven elms, the poplars four That stand beside my father's door,
he adds:
If we follow this
pastoral rivulet that swerves To left and right thro' meadowy curves, That feed the mothers of the flock,
we, too, shall hear
the livelong bleat Of the thick fleec?d sheep from wattled folds Upon the ridg?d wolds.
And shall see the cattle in the rich grass land, and mark on the right the green-gray tower of Spilsby, where so many of the Franklin family lived and died, the family of whom his future bride was sprung.
Still keeping by the brook, we shall see, past the tower of Bag-Enderby which adjoins Somersby, "The gray hill side" rising up behind the Old Hall of Harrington, and
The Quarry trenched along the hill And haunted by the wrangling daw,
above which runs the chalky "ramper" or turnpike-road which leads along the eastern ridge of the wold to Alford, whence you proceed across the level Marsh to the sea at Mablethorpe.
Calm and still light on yon great plain, That sweeps with all its autumn bowers, And crowded farms and lessening towers, To mingle with the bounding main.
Thence descending from the wold he would go through Alford, and on across the sparsely populated pasture-lands, till he came at last to
Some lowly cottage whence we see Stretched wide and wild the waste enormous marsh, Where from the frequent bridge, Like emblems of infinity, The trench?d waters run from sky to sky.
the sandbuilt ridge Of heaped hills that mound the sea.
This strip of land is not marsh in the ordinary sense of the word, but a belt of the richest grass land, all level and with no visible fences, each field being surrounded by a broad dyke or ditch with deep water, hidden in summer by the tall feathery plumes of the "whispering reeds." Across this belt the seawind sweeps for ever. The Poet may allude to this when, in his early poem, "Sir Galahad," he writes:
But blessed forms in whistling storms Fly o'er waste fens and windy fields;
and "the hard grey weather" sung by Kingsley breeds a race of hardy gray-eyed men with long noses, the manifest descendants of the Danes who peopled all that coast, and gave names to most of the villages there, nine-tenths of which end in "by."
The lines in the "Lotos-Eaters":
They sat them down upon the yellow sand Between the sun and moon upon the shore,
describes what the Poet might at any time of full moon have seen from that "sand-built ridge" with the red sun setting over the wide marsh, and the full moon rising out of the eastern sea; and "The wide winged sunset of the misty marsh" recalls one of the most noticeable features of that particular locality, where, across the limitless windy plain, the sun would set in regal splendour; and when "cold winds woke the gray-eyed morn" his rising over the sea would be equally magnificent in colour.
Having crossed the "Marsh" by a raised road with deep wide dykes on either side, and no vestige of hedge or tree in sight, except where a row of black poplars or aspens form a screen from the searching wind round a group of the plainest of farm buildings, red brick with roofing of black glazed pan-tiles, you come to the once tiny village of Mablethorpe, sheltering right under the sea-bank, the wind-blown sands of which are held together by the penetrating roots of the tussocks of long, coarse, sharp-edged grass, and the prickly bushes of sea buckthorn, gray-leaved and orange-berried.
You top the sand-ridge, and below, to right and left, far as eye can see, stretch the flat, brown sands. Across these the tide, which at the full of the moon comes right up to the barrier, goes out for three-quarters of a mile; of this the latter half is left by the shallow wavelets all ribbed, as you see it on the ripple-marked stone of the Horsham quarries, and shining with the bright sea-water which reflects the low rays of the sun; while far off, so far that they seem to be mere toys, the shrimper slowly drives his small horse and cart, to the tail of which is attached the primitive purse net, the other end of it being towed by the patient, long-haired donkey, ridden by a boy whose bare feet dangle in the shallow wavelets. Farther to the south the tide ebbs quite out of sight. This is at "Gibraltar Point," near Wainfleet Haven, where Somersby brook at length finds the sea, a place very familiar to the Poet in his youth. The skin of mud on the sands makes them shine like burnished copper in the level rays of the setting sun, which here have no sandbank to intercept them, but at other times it is a scene of dreary desolation, such as is aptly described in "The Passing of Arthur":
a coast Of ever-shifting sand, and far away The phantom circle of a moaning sea.
It was near this part of the shore that, as a young man, he often walked, rolling out his lines aloud or murmuring them to himself, a habit which was also that of Wordsworth, and led in each case to the peasants supposing the Poet to be "cra?zed," and caused the Somersby cook to wonder "what Mr. Awlfred was always a-praying for," and caused also the fisherman, whom he met on the sands once at 4 A.M. as he was walking without hat or coat, and to whom he bid good-morning, to reply, "Thou poor fool, thou doesn't knaw whether it be night or da?."
But at Mablethorpe the sea does not go out nearly so far, and at high tide it comes right up to the bank with splendid menacing waves, the memory of which furnished him, five and thirty years after he had left Lincolnshire for ever, with the famous simile in "The Last Tournament":
as the crest of some slow-arching wave, Heard in dead night along that table shore, Drops flat, and after the great waters break Whitening for half a league, and thin themselves, Far over sands marbled with moon and cloud, From less and less to nothing.
This accurately describes the flat Lincolnshire coast with its "interminable rollers" breaking on the endless sands, than which waves the Poet always said that he had never anywhere seen grander, and the clap of the wave as it fell on the hard sand could be heard across that flat country for miles. Doubtless this is what prompted the lines in "Locksley Hall":
Locksley Hall, that in the distance overlooks the sandy tracts, And the hollow ocean-ridges roaring into cataracts.
It is not only of the breakers that the Poet has given us pictures. Along these sands it was his wont, no doubt, as it has often been that of the writer,
To watch the crisping ripples on the beach, And tender curving lines of creamy spray,
and it is still Skegness and Mablethorpe which may have furnished him with his simile in "The Dream of Fair Women":
So shape chased shape as swift as, when to land Bluster the winds and tides the self-same way, Crisp foam-flakes scud along the level sand, Torn from the fringe of spray.
Walking along the shore as the tide goes out, you come constantly on creeks and pools left by the receding waves,
A still salt pool, lock'd in with bars of sand, Left on the shore; that hears all night The plunging seas draw backward from the land Their moon-led waters white.
or little dimpled hollows of brine, formed by the wind-swept water washing round some shell or stone:
As the sharp wind that ruffles all day long A little bitter pool about a stone On the bare coast.
Many characteristics of Lincolnshire scenery and of Somersby in particular are introduced in "In Memoriam."
Nor less it pleased in lustier moods Beyond the bounding hill to stray.
Till now the doubtful dusk reveal'd The knolls once more where, couch'd at ease, The white kine glimmer'd, and the trees Laid their dark arms about the field:
and in Canto C. he calls to mind:
The sheepwalk up the windy wold,
and many other features seen in his walks with Arthur Hallam at Somersby.
In "Mariana" we have:
From the dark fen the oxen's low Came to her: without hope of change, In sleep she seem'd to walk forlorn, Till cold winds woke the gray-eyed morn, About the lonely moated grange.
But no picture is more complete and accurate and remarkable than that of a wet day in the Marsh and on the sands of Mablethorpe:
Here often when a child I lay reclined: I took delight in this fair strand and free: Here stood the infant Ilion of the mind, And here the Grecian ships all seem'd to be. And here again I come, and only find The drain-cut level of the marshy lea, Gray sand-banks, and pale sunsets, dreary wind, Dim shores, dense rains, and heavy-clouded sea.
The Spirit of the Lord began to move him at times in the Camp of Dan between Zorah and Eshtaol."
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