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red battle hurtling as they pass. The Saxon kings have strewed their palaces From Thames to Tyne. But, lo! the sceptre shakes; The Dane, remorseless as the hurricane That sweeps his native cliffs, harries the land! What terror strode before his track of blood! 160 What hamlets mourned his desultory march, When on the circling hills, along the sea, The beacon-flame shone nightly! He has passed! Now frowns the Norman victor on his throne, And every cottage shrouds its lonely fire, As the sad curfew sounds. Yet Piety, With new-inspiring energies, awoke, And ampler polity: in woody vales, In unfrequented wilds, and forest-glens, The towers of the sequestered abbey shone, 170 As when the pinnacles of Glaston-Fane First met the morning light. The parish church, Then too, exulting o'er the ruder cross, Upsprung, till soon the distant village peal Flings out its music, where the tapering spire Adds a new picture to the sheltered vale. Uphill, thy rock, where sits the lonely church, Above the sands, seems like the chronicler Of other times, there left to tell the tale! But issuing from the cave, look round, behold 180 How proudly the majestic Severn rides On to the sea; how gloriously in light It rides! Along this solitary ridge, Where smiles, but rare, the blue campanula, Among the thistles and gray stones that peep Through the thin herbage, to the highest point Of elevation, o'er the vale below, Slow let us climb. First look upon that flower, The lowly heath-bell, smiling at our feet. How beautiful it smiles alone! The Power 190 That bade the great sea roar, that spread the heavens, That called the sun from darkness, decked that flower, And bade it grace this bleak and barren hill. Imagination, in her playful mood, Might liken it to a poor village maid, Lowly, but smiling in her lowliness, And dressed so neatly as if every day Were Sunday. And some melancholy bard Might, idly musing, thus discourse to it:-- Daughter of Summer, who dost linger here, 200 Decking the thistly turf, and arid hill, Unseen, let the majestic dahlia Glitter, an empress, in her blazonry Of beauty; let the stately lily shine, As snow-white as the breast of the proud swan Sailing u
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