Simon Lee, The Old Huntsman
by William Wordsworth
English Romantic poet and poet-laureate, whose Lyrical Ballads (1798), first published anonymously with contributions by his friend Coleridge, marked an important turning point in the history of English literature. Some of his many well-known poems include 'The Brothers', 'Michael' and the "Lucy" poems: 'She Dwelt Among the Untrodden Ways', 'Strange Fits of Passion Have I Known', 'A Slumber Did My Spirit Seal' and 'Three Years She Grew in Sun and Shower'. His other great work, the philosophical-autobiographical poem The Prelude was published posthumously in 1850. He also published two poems dealing with the sublime and the picturesque; An Evening Walk and Descriptive Sketches (both in 1793), and his one and only play The Borders (1842). Wordsworth's name, perhaps even more so than that of his friend Coleridge, remains to this day almost synonymous, in England, with Romanticism itself.
Simon Lee, The Old Huntsman
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In the sweet shire of Cardigan, No man like him the horn could sound, He all the country could outrun, And still there's something in the world But, Oh the heavy change! -bereft And he is lean and he is sick; Beside their moss-grown hut of clay, Oft, working by her Husband's side, Few months of life has he in store O Reader! had you in your mind One summer-day I chanced to see "You're overtasked, good Simon Lee, The tears into his eyes were brought, |