Arthur Quiller-Couch, comp. The Oxford Book of Victorian Verse. 1922.
The Pilgrim and the HerdboyRobert Buchanan (18411901)
Pilgrim:
L
With the sunshine on thy hair,
And thy flocks so white and still
Spilt around thee on the hill,
Tell me true, in thy sweet speech,
Of the City I would reach.
Most imperishably bright,
And its gates are golden all,—
And at dawn and evenfall
They grow ruby-bright and blest
To the east and to the west.
Like a lamb with lustrous eyes
Lying at the Shepherd’s feet;
And the breath of it is sweet,
As it rises from the sward
To the nostrils of the Lord!
Hast thou seen it from thy height?
For it lieth up this way,
And at dawn or death of day
Thou hast surely seen it shine
With the light that is divine?
Where the buttercups so sweet
Dust with gold my naked feet,
Where the grass grows green and long,
Sit I here and sing my song,
And the brown bird cries ‘Cuckoo’
Under skies for ever blue!
Flits a little fleecy cloud,
And uplooking I behold
How it turns to rain of gold,
Falling lightly, while around
Comes the stir of its soft sound!
Is the many-colour’d Bow;
’Tis the only light I mark,
Till the mountain-tops grow dark,
And uplooking I espy
Shining glowworms in the sky;
And the voice o’ the waterfall
Growing louder, and ’tis cold
As I guide my flocks to fold;
But no City, great or small,
Have I ever seen at all!