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Poems

By Edward Quillinan. With a Memoir by William Johnston

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FIELD-FOOT CEDAR. II.
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65

FIELD-FOOT CEDAR. II.

Not Menalus, with all his sylvan throng,
Waving applausive to the reed of Pan
While nymphal feet the dancing measure scan,—
Nor Val di Noto, though its forests rung
With Doric harmonies ere Maro sung, —
Not Monte Mario, though the Pine be there
That owes its menaced life to Beaumont's care,
Its glory to the Lute by Wordsworth strung,—
Outcharms these wild wood-rocks to Fancy's eye,
While she beholds this Himalayan plant
A stately cedar, potent to enchant
Beneath its umbrage, in a future age,
Some Poet destined to a mission high,
A Weird successor of the Rydal Sage.
 

Menalus, famous in classical lore for its pine-trees, and as the favourite haunt of Pan, and his company of Nymphs and Fauns.

The Greek Poet was born in Syracuse, which is in the Val di Noto.

See Wordsworth's Sonnet:—

“I saw far off the dark top of a Pine,”
and the note to it.