Chapter 001

The Daffodil Fields

Between the barren pasture and the wood. There is a patch of poultry-stricken grass, Where, in old time, Ryemeadows’ Farmhouse stood, And human fate brought tragic things to pass. A spring comes bubbling up there, cold as glass, It bubbles down, crusting the leaves with lime, Babbling the self-same song that it has sung through time.

Ducks gobble at the selvage of the brook, But still it slips away, the cold hill-spring, Past the Ryemeadows’ lonely woodland nook Where many a stubble gray-goose preens her wing, On, by the woodland side.  You hear it sing Past the lone copse where poachers set their wires, Past the green hill once grim with sacrificial fires.

Another water joins it; then it turns, Runs through the Ponton Wood, still turning west, Past foxgloves, Canterbury bells, and ferns, And many a blackbird’s, many a thrush’s nest; The cattle tread it there; then, with a zest It sparkles out, babbling its pretty chatter Through Foxholes Farm, where it gives white-faced cattle water.

Babbling the self-same song that it has sung through time.
Through Foxholes Farm, where it gives white-faced cattle water.

Chapter 002

The Bloom

Under the road it runs, and now it slips Past the great ploughland, babbling, drop and linn, To the moss’d stumps of elm trees which it lips, And blackberry-bramble-trails where eddies spin. Then, on its left, some short-grassed fields begin, Red-clayed and pleasant, which the young spring fills With the never-quiet joy of dancing daffodils.

There are three fields where daffodils are found; The grass is dotted blue-gray with their leaves; Their nodding beauty shakes along the ground Up to a fir-clump shutting out the eaves Of an old farm where always the wind grieves High in the fir boughs, moaning; people call This farm The Roughs, but some call it the Poor Maid’s Hall.

There, when the first green shoots of tender corn Show on the plough; when the first drift of white Stars the black branches of the spiky thorn, And afternoons are warm and evenings light, The shivering daffodils do take delight, Shaking beside the brook, and grass comes green, And blue dog-violets come and glistening celandine.

With the never-quiet joy of dancing daffodils
Roughs, but some call it the Poor Maid's Hall.

Chapter 003

The Fading

And there the pickers come, picking for town Those dancing daffodils; all day they pick; Hard-featured women, weather-beaten brown, Or swarthy-red, the colour of old brick. At noon they break their meats under the rick. The smoke of all three farms lifts blue in air As though man’s passionate mind had never suffered there.

And sometimes as they rest an old man comes, Shepherd or carter, to the hedgerow-side, And looks upon their gangrel tribe, and hums, And thinks all gone to wreck since master died; And sighs over a passionate harvest-tide Which Death’s red sickle reaped under those hills, There, in the quiet fields among the daffodils.

When this most tragic fate had time and place, And human hearts and minds to show it by, Ryemeadows’ Farmhouse was in evil case: Its master, Nicholas Gray, was like to die. He lay in bed, watching the windy sky, Where all the rooks were homing on slow wings, Cawing, or blackly circling in enormous rings.

The smoke of all three farms lifts blue in air.
There, in the quiet fields among the daffodils.