Decay (2)


The bank with brambles overspread

& little molehills round about it
Was more to me than laurel shades
With paths of gravel finely clouted
& streaking here & streaking there
Through shaven grass & many a border
With rutty lanes had no compare
& heaths were in a richer order
But Poesy is on the wane
I hardly know her face again

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Decay (1)


O Poesy is on the wane

For Fancys visions all unfitting
I hardly know her face again
Nature herself seems on the flitting
The fields grow old & common things
The grass the sky the winds a-blowing
& spots where still a beauty clings
Are sighing "going all a-going”
O Poesy is on the wane
I hardly know her face again

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Fairey dreams


Spring comes anew & brings each little pledge
That still as wont my childish heart decieves
I stoop again for violets in the hedge
Among the Ivy & old withered leaves
& often mark amid the clumps of sedge
The pooty shells I gathered when a boy
But cares have claimed me many an evil day
& chilled the relish which I had for joy
Yet when crab blossoms blush among the may
As wont in years gone bye I scramble now
Up mid the brambles for my old esteems
Filling my hands with many a blooming bough
Till the heart stirring past as present seems
Save the bright sunshine of those fairey dreams

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Evening


What time the woodlands hides the sun 
& Nathans dirty works near done 
When cows are drovd to milking up 
& hogs are calld on swill to sup 
& nogs of hay on ploughmens backs 
Tempt horses to their nightly racks 
& beast which nought but want can draw 
Lunge brousing round their cribs of straw 
What time gen out the threshing clown 
Wi in his corner drops him down 
& sups him oer his porridge free 
& gossips chattering oer their tea

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from ‘The Dream’


When nights last hours like haunting spirits creep
With listning terrors round the couch of sleep
& midnight brooding with its deepest dye
Seizes on fear with dismal sympathy

I dreamd a dream of somthing kin to fate
Which superst[it]ions blackest thoughts create
Something half natural to the grave that seems
Which deaths long trance of slumber aptly dreams

A dream of staggering horrors & of dread
Whose shadows lingerd when the dream had fled
Clinging to memory with their gloomy view
Till doubt & fancy half believd it true

That time was come or seemd as it was come
When death no longer makes the grave its home
When waking spirits leave their earthly rest
To mix forever with the damnd or blest

When years in drowsey thousands counted bye
Then hung on minutes with their destiny
When life in terror drops its draining glass
& all thats mortal like to shadows pass

As neath approaching tempests sinks the sun
When time shall leave eternity begun
Life swoond in terror at that hours dread birth
& as in ague shook the fearful earth

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All my company


I hate the very noise of troublous man

Who did and does me all the harm he can
Free from the world I would a prisoner be
& my own shadow all my company
& lonely see the shooting stars appear
Worlds rushing into judgment all the year
O lead me onward to the loneliest shade
The darkest place that quiet ever made
Where kingcups grow most beauteous to behold
& shut up green and open into gold
Farewell to poesy & leave the will
Take all the world away & leave me still
The mirth & music of a womans voice
That bids the heart be happy & rejoice

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Quiet Joys


O take me from the busy crowd

I cannot bear the noise
For Natures voice is never loud
I seek for quiet joys
The book I love is everywhere
& not in idle words
The book I love is known to all
& better lore affords

The book I love is everywhere
& every place the same
God bade me make my dwelling there
& look for better fame
I never feared the critics pen
To live by my renown
I found the poems in the fields
& only wrote them down

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Philida


The spring returns the gushing rains 
No more defile the scene 
Nor in her cot the maid detains 
Long banishd from the green 
Each awthorn buds sufficient bower 
To hide the amourous dove 
O Philida in such a hour 
How sweet to meet & love 

The snows are all desolvd & gone 
The gale breaths mild & warm 
Springs put the earths green mantle on 
New strewd wi flowers to charm 
Each milking maid attends her cow 
True meeting swains to prove 
O Philida how sweet as now 
Wi thee to walk & love 

The even comes in purple clad 
The sun has left the view 
The willow groves hang oer the pad 
To shield us from the dew 
No eyes break undistinguish night 
To watch us or reprove 
O Philida my souls delight 
Haste let us hide & love

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The Yellowhammers Nest


When shall I see the white-thorn leaves agen

& yellowhammers gathering the dry bents
By the dyke side on stilly moor or fen
Feathered with love and natures good intents
Rude is the tent this architect invents
Rural the place with cart ruts by dyke side
Dead grass horse hair & downy-headed bents
Tied to dead thistles she doth well provide
Close to a hill of ants where cowslips bloom
& shed oer meadows far their sweet perfume
In early spring when winds blow chilly cold
The yellowhammer trailing grass will come
To fix a place & choose an early home
With yellow breast & head of solid gold


I will be speaking: 11am Saturday, 28th March 
At the John Clare Cottage in Helpston
to the title, “The Woke John Clare”

#poetry #environment 
#honesty
Comments welcome below

My humble dust


I would not that my memory all should die,

And pass away with every common lot:
I would not that my humble dust should lie
In quite a strange and unfrequented spot,
By all unheeded and by all forgot,
With nothing save the heedless winds to sigh,
And nothing but the dewy morn to weep
About my grave, far hid from the world's eye:
I fain would have some friend to wander nigh
And find a path to where my ashes sleep--
Not the cold heart that merely passes by,
To read who lies beneath, but such as keep
Past memories warm with deeds of other years,
And pay to friendship some few friendly tears

I will be speaking: 11am Saturday, 28th March 
At the John Clare Cottage in Helpston
to the title, “The Woke John Clare”

#poetry #environment 
#honesty
Comments welcome below


Side of the lane


Theres a little odd house by the side of the Lane

Where the daisy smiles sweet in the spring

Where the morning sun glitters like gold on the pane

& the hedge Sparrow trembles his wing

Where chaffinch green linnet & Sparrows have tones

That make the green Lane & the cottage their own

The sparrows they chirp & make nests i' the eaves

The chaffinch sings ‘pink’ in the hedge o' white thorn

That fences the garden & there the bird weaves

A nest of grey lichen soon as light i' the morn

& there bonny Susan will sit at the door

& see the green linnet at work at its nest

Where the robin flyes in for a crumb on the floor

& seems as if longing to sit on her breast


will be speaking: 11am Saturday, 28th March 
At the John Clare Cottage in Helpston
to the title, “The Woke John Clare”

#poetry #environment 
#honesty
Comments welcome below


Suns wi showers


Thines the dandelion-flowers
Gilt wi dew like suns wi showers
Hare bells thine & bugles blue
& cuckoo flowers all sweet to view
Thy wild woad on each road we see
& medicinal betony
By thy wood side railing reeves
Wi antique mullins flannel leaves
These tho mean the flowers of wastes
Planted here in natures haste

I will be speaking: 11am Saturday, 28th March 
At the John Clare Cottage in Helpston
to the title, “The Woke John Clare”

#poetry #environment 
#honesty
Comments welcome below


Moss strewn mornings


The gatherers seeking entrance pause awhile
Ere they mount up the bank to climb the stile
Half wishing that a better road was nigh
Yet here mid [moss] strewn mornings autumn mild
While pleasing sounds & pleasing sights are bye
Things beautiful delight my heart to smile
Here underneath the stiles moss covered post
A little bunch of fern doth thrive & spring
Hid from the noisey wind & coming frost
Like late reared young neath the wood piegons wing

I will be speaking: 11am Saturday, 28th March 
At the John Clare Cottage in Helpston
to the title, “The Woke John Clare”

#poetry #environment 
#honesty
Comments welcome below


Spring


SPRING (a)

Welcome gentle breathing Spring
Now the birds are heard to sing
& the budding tree is seen
Putting forth her tender green
O delightful season hail
May my footsteps never fail
When time permits to visit thee
& view thy new born scenery

SPRING (b)
Welcome gentle breathing spring
Now the birds begin to sing
Now the Swelling shade is seen
Putting forth its tender green
While the Suns extended way
Sweetly shows the lengthend day
O delightful Season hail
May my footsteps never fail
When Ive time to trample where
All thy beauties reappear

I will be speaking: 11am Saturday, 28th March 
At the John Clare Cottage in Helpston
to the title, “The Woke John Clare”

#poetry #environment 
#honesty
Comments welcome below

Bonny March


The bonny March morning is beaming 

In mingled crimson & grey
White clouds are streaking & creaming 
The sky till the noon of the day
The fir deal looks darker & greener
& grass hills below look the same
The air all about is serener
The birds less familiar & tame

Heres two or three flowers for my fair one
Wood primroses & celandine too
I oft look about for a rare one 
To put in a posy for you
The birds look so clean & so neat
Though theres scarcely a leaf on the grove
The sun shines about me so sweet
I cannot help thinking of love

I will be speaking: 11am Saturday, 28th March 
At the John Clare Cottage in Helpston
to the title, “The Woke John Clare”

#poetry #environment 
#honesty
Comments welcome below


O come to my arms


O come to my arms i' the cool o' the day

When the veil o' the evening falls dewy & grey
O' come to me under the awthorn green
When eventide falls i' the bushes serene
O come to me under the awthorn tree
When the larks on his nest & gone bed is the bee
When the veil of the evening falls dark on the scene
& we'll kiss love and court i' the bushes so green

I will be speaking: 11am Saturday, 28th March 
At the John Clare Cottage in Helpston
to the title, “The Woke John Clare”

#poetry #environment 
#honesty
Comments welcome below

Native Scenes


O Native Scenes for ever dear
So blest so happy as I here have been
So charmd with nature in each varied scene
To leave you all is cutting & severe
Ye hawthorn bushes that from winds would screen
Where oft Ive shelterd from a threatend shower
In youths past bliss in childhoods happy hour
Ye woods Ive wandered seeking out the nest
Ye meadows gay that reard rae many a flower
Where pulling cowslips Ive been doubly blest
Humming gay fancies as I pluckd the prize
Oh fate unkind beloved scenes adieu
Your vanishd pleasures crowd my swimming eyes
& make the wounded heart to bleed anew

I will be speaking: 11am Saturday, 28th March 
At the John Clare Cottage in Helpston
to the title, “The Woke John Clare”

#poetry #environment 
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Comments welcome below


Malcolm Guite turns to John Clare


Malcolm Guite turns to John Clare, who notices the unnoticed
(Poet’s Corner, Church Times - 6th March 2026)

March month of “many weathers” wildly comes 
In hail and snow and rain and threatning hums 
And floods. . .

JOHN CLARE, that close observer and celebrant of the seasons, is, as always, right. The past week or two have, indeed, seen many weathers wildly come, as February turns to March. But, unlike Coleridge or even Wordsworth, Clare’s account of the turn of the year in The Shepherd’s Calendar is as much about the life of ordinary labourers in the fields as it is about nature herself.

His poem is crowded with figures who, even in his lifetime, would be driven from the fields and exchange their traditional jobs for new and grimmer labour in the towns and factories. He sees “the ploughman on the elting soil” — elting being a Northampton dialect word for persistent labouring, as though the soil itself were working with the ploughman. He sees the shepherd who

in his path will spye
The little daisey in the wet grass lye
That to the peeping sun enlivens gay
Like Labour smiling on an holiday.

He sees the

woodman that in wild seclusion dwells
Wi chopping toil the coming spring decieves
Of many dancing shadows flowers and leaves
And in his pathway down the mossy wood
Crushes wi hasty feet full many a bud.

This is no mere idle celebration of nature, such as Wordsworth with his daffodils, for here the necessities of labour sometimes crush the buds that other poets only contemplate. Then comes a vivid little vignette of the hedger:

Muffld in baffles leathern coat and gloves
The hedger toils oft scaring rustling doves
From out the hedgerows. . .

Then, surely not far from the hedger, comes the ditcher:

The stooping ditcher in the water stands
Letting the furrowd lakes from off the lands
Or splashing cleans the pasture brooks of mud. . .

These last two have a particular resonance for me, as, when I was training for the priesthood, I did a course on rural ministry, part of which was a placement with a Herefordshire hill farmer who, perhaps to tease, perhaps to prove the mettle of this callow youth from Cambridge, set me all day to hedging and ditching in the March rain with a couple of his older labourers, whose skill at both jobs I admired and tried, but failed, to emulate.

In Clare’s day, not even the elderly were spared the hard labour of the season. He gives us a vivid glimpse of an old woman at work gathering watercress:

The water cresses neath the wave is seen
Which the old woman gladly drags to land
Wi reaching long rake in her tottering hand.

We might read Clare now with some tint of cosy nostalgia for the old ways of the land, now lost to progress and urbanisation; but that is not how Clare should be read. Instead, we should wonder what poetry he might be writing now were he among us. I’d wager that he would be making equally vivid and closely observed poems about the dustmen on an early round in their council overalls, or the roadworkers with their ear-defenders, mastering the hideous noise and vibration of jackhammers while the cars swerve too close past them when the lights change.

His poetry, then, as it would be now, is a loving observation of ordinary life, of unnoticed and often poorly rewarded labourers, doing the work that we take for granted, but without which none of us would live our more comfortable lives.

Clouds


Clouds rack & drive before the wind 

In shapes & forms of every kind 
Like waves that rise without the roars 
& rocks that guard untrodden shores 
Now castles pass majestic bye 
& ships in peaceful havens lie 
These gone ten thousand shapes ensue 
For ever beautiful & new

The scattered clouds lie calm and still 

& day throws gold on every hill 

Their thousand heads in glory run 

As each were worlds & owned a sun 

The rime it clings to everything 

It beards the early buds of spring 

The mossy pales the orchard spray 

Are feathered with its silver-grey

I will be speaking: 11am Saturday, 28th March 
At the John Clare Cottage in Helpston
to the title, “The Woke John Clare”

#poetry #environment 
#honesty
Comments welcome below


To the butterflye


Lovley insect haste away 
Greet once more the sunny day
Leave o leave the mirky barn 
Ere trapping spiders thee discern
If they do they will beset 
Thy golden wings in filmy net
Then alls in vain to set thee free 
Hopes all lost for Liberty 

Soon theyl drag thee in the wall 
Suck thy downy form and all
Murder tho a base employ 
Tis the spiders only joy 
Then lovley insect haste away 
Greet once more the sunny day
Never think that I belie
Never fear a [summer] skie

I will be speaking: 11am Saturday, 28th March 
At the John Clare Cottage in Helpston
to the title, “The Woke John Clare”

#poetry #environment 
#honesty
Comments welcome below