University of Virginia Library

Search this document 
The Poems of John Clare

Edited with an Introduction by J. W. Tibble

expand section1. 
expand section2. 

LONE HAPPINESS

These birds, how happy must they be!’
I muttered, as I reached to pull
The woodbine twisting round the tree
In spots so wild and beautiful;
The furze flowers, spread on either hand,
Shine one broad shower of gleaming gold,
And on this mole-hill where I stand
To look, 'tis luscious to behold.
I've oft been glad at heart to see
A footpath winding through the grass
O'er narrow stiles 'neath spreading tree,
Not wide enough for two to pass;
But now no ownership I fear,
Nor path to keep nor stile to climb,
I feel myself a monarch here,
My very fancies grow sublime.

239

Yon bird that winnows in the sky
On narrow, pointed, quivering wings,
These sheep that in the mole-hills lie,
Are all the hermit living things
I see—and from the world away
I feel what she can never give,
So happy at my heart to-day
That from the world I wish to live.