Textarchiv - John Freeman https://www.textarchiv.com/john-freeman English poet and essayist. Born on 29 January 1880. Died 23 September 1929. de Sweet England https://www.textarchiv.com/john-freeman/sweet-england <div class="field field-name-body field-type-text-with-summary field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item even" property="schema:text content:encoded"><p>I heard a boy that climbed up Dover&#039;s Hill<br /> Singing Sweet England, sweeter for his song.<br /> The notes crept muffled through the copse, but still<br /> Sharply recalled the things forgotten long,<br /> The music that my own boy&#039;s lips had known,<br /> Singing, and old airs on a wild flute blown.</p> <p>And other hills, more grim and lonely far,<br /> And valleys empty of these orchard trees;<br /> A sheep-pond filled with the moon, a single star<br /> I had watched by night searching the wreckful seas;<br /> And all the streets and streets that childhood knew<br /> In years when London streets were all my view.</p> <p>And I remembered how that song I heard,<br /> Sweet England, sung by children on May-day,<br /> Nor any song was sweeter of a bird<br /> Than that half-grievous air from children gay—<br /> For then, as now, youth made the sadness bright,<br /> Till the words, Sweet, Sweet England, shone with light.</p> <p>Now, listening, I forgot how men yet fought<br /> For this same England, till the song was done<br /> And no sound lingered but the lark&#039;s, that brought<br /> New music down from fields of cloud and sun,<br /> Or the sad lapwing&#039;s over fields of green<br /> Crying beneath the copse, near but unseen.</p> <p>Then I remembered. All wide England spread<br /> Before me, hill and wood and meadow and stream<br /> And ancient roads and homes of men long dead,<br /> And all the beauty a familiar dream.<br /> On the green hills a cloud of silver grey<br /> Gave gentle light stranger than light of day.</p> <p>And clear between the hills, past the near crest<br /> And many hills, the hungry cities crept,<br /> Noble and mean, oppressive and oppressed,<br /> Where dreams unrealized of England slept:<br /> And they too England, packed in dusty street<br /> With men that half forgot England was sweet.</p> <p>—Millions of men that almost had forgot<br /> And now remembered since for her they strove;<br /> But that vexed happiness remembered not,<br /> And pain, in the simplicity of love;<br /> Bright careless courage hiding all that stirred<br /> Within, when that loud solemn call they heard.</p> <p>Now they were far, but like a living brain<br /> Quick with their thought, the earth, hills, air and light<br /> Were quivering as though a shining rain<br /> Falling all round made ev&#039;n the light more bright;<br /> And trees and water and heath and hedge-flowers fair<br /> With more than natural sweetness washed the air.</p> <p>From hill to hill a sparkling web it swung,<br /> A snare for happiness, lit with lovely dews.<br /> The very smoke of cities now was hung<br /> But like a grave girl&#039;s dress of tranquil hues:<br /> And how (I thought) can England, seen thus bright,<br /> Lifting her clear frank head, but love the light?—</p> <p>No, not her brain! that bright web was the shadow<br /> Of the high spirit in their spirit shining<br /> Who on scarred foreign hill and trenchèd meadow<br /> Kept the faith yet, unfearful, unrepining;—<br /> Her faith that with the dark world&#039;s liberty<br /> Mingles as earth&#039;s great rivers with the sea.</p> <p>O with what gilding ray was the land agleam!<br /> It was not sun and dew, bush, bough and leaf,<br /> But human spirits visible as in a dream<br /> That turns from glad to aching, being too brief:<br /> Courage and beauty shining in such brightness<br /> That the dark thoughtful woods were no more lightless.</p> <p>But most the hills a splendour had put on<br /> Of golden honour, bright and high and calm<br /> And like old heroes young men dream upon<br /> When midnight stirs with magic sword and palm;—<br /> With the fled mist all meanness put away<br /> And the air clear and keen as salt sea-spray . . .</p> <p>And yet no dream, no dream! I saw the whole,<br /> The reap&#039;d fields, idle kine and wandering sheep.<br /> A weak wind through the near tall hedge-tree stole,<br /> And died where Dover&#039;s Hill rose bare and steep;<br /> I saw yet what I saw an hour ago,<br /> But knew what save by dreams I did not know—</p> <p>Sweet England!—wild proud heart of things unspoken,<br /> Spirit that men bear shyly and love purely;<br /> That dies to live anew a life unbroken<br /> As spring from every winter rising surely;<br /> Sweet England unto generations sped,<br /> Now bitter-sweetest for her daily dead.</p> </div></div></div><div class="field field-name-field-author field-type-taxonomy-term-reference field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item even" rel="schema:author"><a href="/john-freeman" typeof="skos:Concept" property="schema:name" datatype="">John Freeman</a></div></div></div><div class="field field-name-field-releasedate field-type-number-integer field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item even" property="schema:datePublished">1916</div></div></div><span rel="schema:url" resource="/john-freeman/sweet-england" class="rdf-meta element-hidden"></span><span property="schema:name" content="Sweet England" class="rdf-meta element-hidden"></span> Mon, 16 Jan 2017 21:42:10 +0000 mrbot 5926 at https://www.textarchiv.com