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In Cornwall and Across the Sea

With Poems Written in Devonshire. By Douglas B. W. Sladen

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ON THE CORNISH MOORS.
  
  
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 I. 
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ON THE CORNISH MOORS.

He, whom the Muse beguiles, doth seldom note
The flight of time or covering of space,
But rambles on with absent-minded face,
Oft with light tread, though blistered be his foot
His body weary and his goal remote;
The mind's impatience wearies more than pace;
And he who feeds or lulls his mind, can brace
A weary frame to task too heavy put.
I had been climbing all a summer day:
Over rough Cornish moors had been my roam:
Jaded and footsore was I, far from home,
And thrice as far it seemed to lie away,
When suddenly the Muse spoke, and I sped
As lightly home as though enchantment-led.

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II.

The Cornish moors! what visions raise they not
Of fairies, pixies, giants, knights, and kings?
For here the latest fairies danced their rings
And pixies lurked in every lonely spot
To lure the traveller: and giants wrote
Their history in stones whose vastness sings,
As never minstrel might who harped on strings,
The giants' mighty lives. Here Tristram smote
In his first fight, and Arthur in his last
Beside the slaughterous bridge of Camelford
After the power of his knights had passed,
And here the loyal Cornishmen have poured
Times out of mind their blood in any cause
Which seemed to simple folk for Nature's laws.