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His thousand-footed flocks, pass bleating forth;
That lingering, crop Spring-tides new sappy grass.
Follow today the weanlings, with their dams.
That butt, that underpush, the foster dugs:
And wanton, as they wend, with that new life;
Which kindles ín their blood.
That woolly drift
Of sheep, soon spersed is with his sons: and left
Is Cædmon lone, upleaning on his bat.
He, in his spirit, méditates some new chant
For Hilda, his venerable agéd Abbess.
Bond, though he be, unlettered, agéd, halt;
Towers his free spirit, as lavrock soars from clod,

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Still héavenward: that on flickering wings aloft;
With his bird-raptures, fills the sunny skies.
So lifting Cædmon, his transported looks
From lowly sod, attunes his Saxon notes;
To that celestial Choir, he him-seemeth to hear
Above, of Angels in the holy height:
Singing to golden harps resounding strings.
As for me, I found a thicket bush of broom,
Nigh hand; whereunder I might drowse a space.
On freshing herb, in that sweet morrows breath.
Though spent with fast, and crazed my bones with aches;
Half slúmbering there the while, I ever sought;
If haply I, óf that Father of mine Art;
Might not attain, through making heard of his;
To some insight, in Éngla-lánds glee-craft;
Which had sufficed to light, late heathen hearts.
Was Sun gone up, in His diurnal course,
To undern height, when I awaked from rest:
And o'er wide laund, bedight with golden knops,
And daisies ás the stars, that herding fellowship,
And fleecy multitude, lo, again approach.
The tardy ewes, troop hither with full cuds.

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That bold herd-crew, hinds tawny in wind and wet;
Go girt in long say coats and pilches rough.
And each hind bears, his sinewed bow at back;
And sheaf of well-fledged arrows ín a case;
And bag of ready sling-stones at his belt:
Their flocks to ward, against the prowler wolf.
The woolly trains, come to noons couching-place:
The herdgrooms stand, to number o'er their stock:
That gathered with drooped craigs, sheep behind sheep;
Stánd, each one, shadowing in anothers breach.
They tell them o'er, none lacketh.
A hind gone forth;
Gathered dry sticks and stover, his arms' full; casts
Them down, in the winds eye: and, kindled sparks,
The climbing flame, amidst his crackling heap,
Upblows; which all-embracing, licketh up
The turf. That soon out-blowing, bitter reek;
This herdfolk deem, should drive away the brieze.
Left then their barking curs to mind the stock;
(Those course oft out, whiles these together stoop:)
Tall grooms, with unkempt glibs, all reverent dofft
Their hoods, now 'sembled round the shepherds' sire;

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Attend their fathers giving-thanks to hear;
Before noon meat.
Lo, full of holy thought
Thrall Cædmon lifteth up anew his looks,
And horny pálms to Heavenward, whither mounts
His lowly spirit; where dwelleth All-Fatherhood.
Take on new grace, those rude-limned looks of his;
Whiles, after Saxon sort, lay-wright, his lips
Quoth:
Hérry we thé Worlds Lord,
Ín His wonder-works:
With the Everliving Word;
Which dwelleth with Him on height.
He All-Father shaped green Earth;
All birds therein and beasts;
The Sea likewise and fish:
And Man made Lord thereof.
One-fold in Three, unseen,
As ís winds-breath unseen:
He eternally doth remain;
Abóve the Sun, All-Might:
Who giveth meat tó all Breath.
 

Praise.


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Store have they of bárley-cakes, baked ón the hearth,
For their noon-meat, and cheese ín théir hide-scrips;
And fór their bever, wig, in goat skins tough;
Those seen me, a Stranger, not far from them, off;
There, one from thé herd-crew, ran, shouting forth:
Which bade me, in Cædmons name, (their Abbeys use;)
To turn and eat, of súch cheer as they have.