Evening Walk


LEAPS                           
1793 An Evening Walk  Dashed down the rough rock, lightly leaps along,
1793 An Evening Walk  Nought but the char that for the may-fly leaps,

LEAVES                          
1793 An Evening Walk  Their moveless boughs and leaves like threads of gold;

LED                             
1793 An Evening Walk  --Then Quiet led me up the huddling rill,
1793 An Evening Walk  Led by Fear's cold wet hand, and dogg'd by Death;

LENGTH                          
1793 An Evening Walk  When school-boys stretch'd their length upon the green;

LENGTHEN'D                      
1793 An Evening Walk  Unhurt pursues his lengthen'd flight, while all

LES                             
1793 An Evening Walk  in the l'Agriculture ou les Georgiques Franoises, of M. Roossuet.

LEVEL                           
1793 An Evening Walk  Far in the level forest's central gloom;

LIFE                            
1793 An Evening Walk  When Life rear'd laughing up her morning sun;
1793 An Evening Walk  And skyward life, like one that prays, his hand,
1793 An Evening Walk  Nought else of man or life remains behind

LIFTED                          
1793 An Evening Walk  He swells his lifted chest, and backward flings

LIFTS                           
1793 An Evening Walk  She lifts in silence up her lovely face;

LIGHT                           
1793 An Evening Walk  Sole light admitted here, a small cascade,
1793 An Evening Walk  To mark the birches' stem all golden light,
1793 An Evening Walk  Feeds on in light, nor thinkgs of winter's shock;
1793 An Evening Walk  When up the hills, as now, retreats the light,
1793 An Evening Walk  --Ah me! all light is mute amid the gloom,
1793 An Evening Walk  Toss'd light from hand to hand; while on the ground
1793 An Evening Walk  Now with religious awe the farewel light
1793 An Evening Walk  Long streaks of fairy light the wave illume
1793 An Evening Walk  Breaks on the shade, the shade upon the light.
1793 An Evening Walk  The bird with fading light who ceas'd to thread
1793 An Evening Walk  Frosting with hoary light the pearly ground,
1793 An Evening Walk  Above the gloomy valley flings her light,

LIGHT'NING                      
1793 An Evening Walk  Soon shall the Light'ning hold before thy head

LIGHTED                         
1793 An Evening Walk  lighted fane unfold,

LIGHTLESS                       
1793 An Evening Walk  All blind she wilders o'er the lightless heath,

LIGHTLY                         
1793 An Evening Walk  Dashed down the rough rock, lightly leaps along,

LIGHTS                          
1793 An Evening Walk  Spotting the northern cliffs with lights between; 
1793 An Evening Walk  Slant wat'ry lights, from parting clouds a-pace,
1793 An Evening Walk  Slow lights upon the lake's still bosom fall,
1793 An Evening Walk  Small cottage lights across the water stream,

LILIES                          
1793 An Evening Walk  Nibbling the water lilies as they pass,

LILY                            
1793 An Evening Walk  lily of the vale;
1793 An Evening Walk  The lily of the valley is found in great

LIMBS                           
1793 An Evening Walk  To teach their limbs along the buring road
1793 An Evening Walk  Or taught their limbs along the dusty road

LINE                            
1793 An Evening Walk  powerful song. A line of one of our older poets. [Back

LINES                           
1793 An Evening Walk  And, fronting the bright west in stronger lines,
1793 An Evening Walk  With bordering lines of intervening gloom,
1793 An Evening Walk  These lines are only applicable to the

LINGERER                        
1793 An Evening Walk  The latest lingerer of the forest train,

LINK'D                          
1793 An Evening Walk  When link'd with thoughtless Mirth I cours'd the plain,

LIPS                            
1793 An Evening Walk  Scarce heard, their chattering lips her shoulder chill,

LIQUID                          
1793 An Evening Walk  And all the babbling brooks are liquid gold;

LIST'NING                       
1793 An Evening Walk  List'ning th' aereal music of the hill,

LISTENING                       
1793 An Evening Walk  Below Eve's listening Star, the sheep walk stills

LIT                             
1793 An Evening Walk  That lit the dark slant woods with silvery white!

LITTLE                          
1793 An Evening Walk  For then, ev'n then, the little heart would beat
1793 An Evening Walk  And her brown little-ones around her leads,
1793 An Evening Walk  At peace inverted, your little necks ye lave,

LIVELONG                        
1793 An Evening Walk  In youth's wild eye the livelong day was bright,

LOAD                            
1793 An Evening Walk  A few short steps to totter with their load,
1793 An Evening Walk  A few short steps to totter with their load.

LOCAL                           
1793 An Evening Walk  The word intake is local, and

LOCK'D                          
1793 An Evening Walk  --With backward gaze, lock'd joints, and step of pain,

LODGE                           
1793 An Evening Walk  And round the West's proud lodge their shadows throw,

LODORE                          
1793 An Evening Walk  That stuns the tremulous cliffs of high Lodore:

LONE                            
1793 An Evening Walk  In these lone vales, if aught of faith may claim,
1793 An Evening Walk  The lone-black fir, forsakes the faded plain; 

LONELY                          
1793 An Evening Walk  Where peace to Grasmere's lonely island leads,
1793 An Evening Walk  Bright beams the lonely mountain horse illume
1793 An Evening Walk  Till, but the lonely beacon all is fled,
1793 An Evening Walk  Or yell in the deep woods of lonely hound.

LONESOME                        
1793 An Evening Walk  From lonesome chapel at the mountain's feet,

LONG                            
1793 An Evening Walk  Long rails into the shallow lake extend;
1793 An Evening Walk  And long, with wistful gaze, his walk survey'd,
1793 An Evening Walk  Shall hide me wooing long thy wildwood strain;
1793 An Evening Walk  And desert stone-chat, all day long, is heard.
1793 An Evening Walk  And with long rays and shades the landscape shines;
1793 An Evening Walk  A long blue bar it's aegis orb divides, 
1793 An Evening Walk  Long may ye roam these hermit waves that sleep,
1793 An Evening Walk  Long grass and willows form the woven wall, 
1793 An Evening Walk  Shoots upward, darting his long neck before.
1793 An Evening Walk  The solemn curfew swinging long and deep;
1793 An Evening Walk  Long streaks of fairy light the wave illume
1793 An Evening Walk  And at long intervals the mill-dog's howl;

LOOK                            
1793 An Evening Walk  For hope's deserted well why wistful look?

LOOKS                           
1793 An Evening Walk  And glorying looks around, the silent tides:

LOOPHOLES                       
1793 An Evening Walk  Thence, from three paly loopholes mild and small,

LOST                            
1793 An Evening Walk  Lost in the deepen'd darkness, glimmers hoar;

LOVE                            
1793 An Evening Walk  I love to mark the quarry's moving trains,
1793 An Evening Walk  I love beside the glowing lake to stray,

LOVELIER                        
1793 An Evening Walk  Her dawn, far lovelier than the Moon's own morn;

LOVELY                          
1793 An Evening Walk  She lifts in silence up her lovely face;

LOVES                           
1793 An Evening Walk  While tender Cares and mild domestic Loves

LOW                             
1793 An Evening Walk  Low bending o'er the colour'd water, fold
1793 An Evening Walk  --When low-hung clouds each star of summer hide, 
1793 An Evening Walk  Stays it's low murmur in th' unbreathing vale;

LUCID                           
1793 An Evening Walk  Brushing with lucid wands the water's face,

LUSTRES                         
1793 An Evening Walk  Soft o'er the surface creep the lustres pale

LYCHENS                         
1793 An Evening Walk  By lychens grey, and scanty moss o'ergrown,

LYRES                           
1793 An Evening Walk  Tune in the mountain dells their water lyres.

M                               
1793 An Evening Walk  in the l'Agriculture ou les Georgiques Franoises, of M. Roossuet.

MAGIC                           
1793 An Evening Walk  --'Tis restless magic all; at once the bright

MAKES                           
1793 An Evening Walk  of which I do not recollect that any tour descriptive of this country
                               makes

MALIGNANT                       
1793 An Evening Walk  Yet still, the sport of some malignant Pow'r,

MAN                             
1793 An Evening Walk  Alas! the idle tale of man is found
1793 An Evening Walk  Nought else of man or life remains behind
1793 An Evening Walk  Or shout that wakes the ferry-man from sleep, 

MANTLING                        
1793 An Evening Walk  Close by her mantling wings' embraces prest.

MARK                            
1793 An Evening Walk  To mark the birches' stem all golden light,
1793 An Evening Walk  I love to mark the quarry's moving trains,

MASS                            
1793 An Evening Walk  Where but a mass of shade the sight can trace,

MASTS                           
1793 An Evening Walk  The skiffs with naked masts at anchor laid,

MATE                            
1793 An Evening Walk  No night-duck clamours for his wilder'd mate,

MAY                             
1793 An Evening Walk  In these lone vales, if aught of faith may claim,
1793 An Evening Walk  Long may ye roam these hermit waves that sleep,
1793 An Evening Walk  Nought but the char that for the may-fly leaps,
1793 An Evening Walk  its veracity, that may amuse the reader. [Back to text]

MEADS                           
1793 An Evening Walk  To willowy hedgerows, and to emerald meads;

MEAND'RING                      
1793 An Evening Walk  Along the wild meand'ring shore to view,

MEANING                         
1793 An Evening Walk  to this country. Glen, gill, and dingle, have the same meaning.
                               [Back

MEEKER                          
1793 An Evening Walk  The female with a meeker charm succeeds,

MELANCHOLY'S                    
1793 An Evening Walk  Sad tides of joy from Melancholy's hand;

MELLOW                          
1793 An Evening Walk  The hound, the horse's tread, and mellow horn;

MEMORY                          
1793 An Evening Walk  And memory of departed pleasures, more.
1793 An Evening Walk  While, Memory at my side, I wander here,

MEN                             
1793 An Evening Walk  Dwarf pannier'd steeds, and men, and numerous wains:

MENTION                         
1793 An Evening Walk  mention. Perhaps this poem may fall into the hands of some curious
                               traveller,

MERE                            
1793 An Evening Walk  Of giant yews that frown on Rydale's mere;
1793 An Evening Walk  High towering from the sullen dark-brown mere,

MERRY                           
1793 An Evening Walk  In foamy breaks the rill, with merry song,

MIDDLE                          
1793 An Evening Walk  middle part of the lake. [Back to text]

MIDWAY                          
1793 An Evening Walk  While, near the midway cliff, the silver'd kite 
1793 An Evening Walk  Along the midway cliffs with violent speed;

MILD                            
1793 An Evening Walk  And eve's mild hour invites my steps abroad.
1793 An Evening Walk  While tender Cares and mild domestic Loves
1793 An Evening Walk  Thence, from three paly loopholes mild and small,

MILKMAID                        
1793 An Evening Walk  They not the trip of harmless milkmaid feel.
1793 An Evening Walk  The milkmaid stops her ballad, and her pail

MILL                            
1793 An Evening Walk  And at long intervals the mill-dog's howl;

MIND                            
1793 An Evening Walk  To call from other worlds the wilder'd mind,
1793 An Evening Walk  now the mind employ
1793 An Evening Walk  The soft gloom deep'ning on the tranquil mind.

MINE                            
1793 An Evening Walk  Far from my dearest friend, 'tis mine to rove
1793 An Evening Walk  How sweet it's streamlet murmurs in mine ear!) 

MINGLE                          
1793 An Evening Walk  Sweet are the sounds that mingle from afar,

MINSTRELS                       
1793 An Evening Walk  The far-off minstrels of the haunted hill,

MIRROR                          
1793 An Evening Walk  And breaks the mirror of the circling deeps;

MIRTH                           
1793 An Evening Walk  When link'd with thoughtless Mirth I cours'd the plain,

MOAN                            
1793 An Evening Walk  Snatch'd from her shoulder with despairing moan,

MOCK                            
1793 An Evening Walk  Strange apparitions mock the village sight.

MONARCH                         
1793 An Evening Walk  Gaz'd by his sister-wives, the monarch stalks;

MONUMENT                        
1793 An Evening Walk  Not far from Broughton is a Druid monument,

MOON                            
1793 An Evening Walk  Salute with boding note the rising moon,
1793 An Evening Walk  But now the clear-bright Moon her zenith

MOON'S                          
1793 An Evening Walk  The Moon's fix'd gaze between the opening trees,
1793 An Evening Walk  Her dawn, far lovelier than the Moon's own morn;

MOONLIGHT                       
1793 An Evening Walk  Or the first woodcocks roam'd the moonlight
1793 An Evening Walk  in the moonlight nights, are covered with immense quantities of
                               woodcocks;

MOONLIGHT'S                     
1793 An Evening Walk  As touch'd with dawning moonlight's hoary gleams,

MORAL                           
1793 An Evening Walk  Depicted in the dial's moral round;

MORN                            
1793 An Evening Walk  Safe from your door ye hear at breezy morn,
1793 An Evening Walk  Her dawn, far lovelier than the Moon's own morn;

MORNING                         
1793 An Evening Walk  The sun at morning, and the stars at night,
1793 An Evening Walk  When Life rear'd laughing up her morning sun;
1793 An Evening Walk  The ray the cot of morning trav'ling nigh,

MORROW'S                        
1793 An Evening Walk  Sweet rill, farewell! To-morrow's noon again,

MOSS                            
1793 An Evening Walk  Inverted shrubs, and moss of darkest green,
1793 An Evening Walk  By lychens grey, and scanty moss o'ergrown,

MOST                            
1793 An Evening Walk  forms the aestuary at Broughton, may be found some of the most
                               romantic

MOTHER                          
1793 An Evening Walk  Press the sad kiss, fond mother! vainly fears

MOTHER'S                        
1793 An Evening Walk  She in a mother's care, her beauty's pride
1793 An Evening Walk  Fair Swan! by all a mother's joys caress'd, 

MOTION                          
1793 An Evening Walk  Mr. Gilpin explains it, of the sound of the motion of a stick through
                               the

MOUNT                           
1793 An Evening Walk  Alternately they mount

MOUNTAIN                        
1793 An Evening Walk  Where tipp'd with gold the mountain-summits glow'd.
1793 An Evening Walk  Bright beams the lonely mountain horse illume
1793 An Evening Walk  Found by the verdant door of mountain farms.
1793 An Evening Walk  Tune in the mountain dells their water lyres.
1793 An Evening Walk  The mountain streams their rising song suspend;
1793 An Evening Walk  Like a black wall, the mountain steeps appear,
1793 An Evening Walk  The song of mountain-streams, unheard by
1793 An Evening Walk  signifies a mountain-inclosure. [Back to text]

MOUNTAIN'S                      
1793 An Evening Walk  From lonesome chapel at the mountain's feet,
1793 An Evening Walk  And eyes through tears the mountain's shadeless height;
1793 An Evening Walk  Mid groves of clouds that crest the mountain's brow,
1793 An Evening Walk  Beyond the mountain's giant reach that hides
1793 An Evening Walk  The deepest dell the mountain's breast displays,

MOUNTAINS                       
1793 An Evening Walk  scenery of these mountains. [Back to text]

MOUNTED                         
1793 An Evening Walk  'Till higher mounted, strives in vain to chear

MOUNTS                          
1793 An Evening Walk  Anon, in order mounts a gorgeous show

MOVELESS                        
1793 An Evening Walk  Their moveless boughs and leaves like threads of gold;
1793 An Evening Walk  Proud of the varying arch and moveless form of snow.

MOVES                           
1793 An Evening Walk  With furtive watch pursue her as she moves;
1793 An Evening Walk  The talking boat that moves with pensive sound,

MOVING                          
1793 An Evening Walk  I love to mark the quarry's moving trains,

MR                              
1793 An Evening Walk  Mr. Gilpin explains it, of the sound of the motion of a stick through
                               the

MURMUR                          
1793 An Evening Walk  Stays it's low murmur in th' unbreathing vale;

MURMURS                         
1793 An Evening Walk  These all to swell the village murmurs blend,
1793 An Evening Walk  How sweet it's streamlet murmurs in mine ear!) 

MUSE                            
1793 An Evening Walk  And ever, as we fondly muse, we find

MUSIC                           
1793 An Evening Walk  While music stealing round the glimmering deeps
1793 An Evening Walk  List'ning th' aereal music of the hill,

MUTE                            
1793 An Evening Walk  Crouched begin the swain, in mute distress,
1793 An Evening Walk  --Ah me! all light is mute amid the gloom,

NAKED                           
1793 An Evening Walk  Chearing its naked waste of scatter'd stone
1793 An Evening Walk  The skiffs with naked masts at anchor laid,

NATIVE                          
1793 An Evening Walk  ferocious, round his native walks,

NE'ER                           
1793 An Evening Walk  Yet ne'er, like hapless human wanderers, throw

NEAR                            
1793 An Evening Walk  While, near the midway cliff, the silver'd kite 
1793 An Evening Walk  She calls them near, and with affection sweet
1793 An Evening Walk  The weary hills, impervious, black'ning near;

NECK                            
1793 An Evening Walk  With forward neck the closing gate to press;
1793 An Evening Walk  His bridling neck between his tow'ring wings:
1793 An Evening Walk  Their frozen arms her neck no more can fold;
1793 An Evening Walk  Or the swan stirs the reeds, his neck and bill
1793 An Evening Walk  Shoots upward, darting his long neck before.

NECKS                           
1793 An Evening Walk  At peace inverted, your little necks ye lave,

NERVOUS                         
1793 An Evening Walk  Spur clad his nervous feet, and firm his tread;

NIBBLING                        
1793 An Evening Walk  Nibbling the water lilies as they pass,

NIGH                            
1793 An Evening Walk  The ray the cot of morning trav'ling nigh,

NIGHT                           
1793 An Evening Walk  The sun at morning, and the stars at night,
1793 An Evening Walk  Blends with the solemn colouring of night;
1793 An Evening Walk  No night-duck clamours for his wilder'd mate,
1793 An Evening Walk  Unheeded Night has overcome the vales,
1793 An Evening Walk  Night. [Back to text]
1793 An Evening Walk  Charming the night-calm with her

NIGHTS                          
1793 An Evening Walk  On cold blue nights, in hut or straw-built shed;
1793 An Evening Walk  which in the dark nights, retire into the woods. [Back to

NOON                            
1793 An Evening Walk  When, in the south, the wan noon brooding still,
1793 An Evening Walk  Sweet rill, farewell! To-morrow's noon again,

NOONTIDE                        
1793 An Evening Walk  By the lake's edge, she rose--to face the noontide heat;

NORTHERN                        
1793 An Evening Walk  Spotting the northern cliffs with lights between; 

NOTE                            
1793 An Evening Walk  Salute with boding note the rising moon,

NOTES                           
1793 An Evening Walk  --As thro' th' astonish'd woods the notes ascend,

NOUGHT                          
1793 An Evening Walk  Nought wakens or disturbs it's tranquil tides;
1793 An Evening Walk  Nought but the char that for the may-fly leaps,
1793 An Evening Walk  Nought else of man or life remains behind

NUMB                            
1793 An Evening Walk  Shakes her numb arm that slumbers with its weight,

NUMEROUS                        
1793 An Evening Walk  Dwarf pannier'd steeds, and men, and numerous wains:

O'ERGROWN                       
1793 An Evening Walk  By lychens grey, and scanty moss o'ergrown,

O'ERHANG                        
1793 An Evening Walk  Where oaks o'erhang the road the radiance shoots

O'ERLABOUR'D                    
1793 An Evening Walk  Shot stinging through her stark o'erlabour'd bones,

O'ERLOOK                        
1793 An Evening Walk  Where antique roots its bustling path o'erlook,

O'ERWALK                        
1793 An Evening Walk  O'erwalk the viewless plank from side to side;

OAK                             
1793 An Evening Walk  The oak its dark'ning boughs and foliage twines,

OAKS                            
1793 An Evening Walk  Where oaks o'erhang the road the radiance shoots

OAR                             
1793 An Evening Walk  Soon follow'd by his hollow-parting oar,

OBJECT                          
1793 An Evening Walk  (Sole bourn, sole wish, sole object of my way;

OBSEQUIOUS                      
1793 An Evening Walk  Obsequious Grace the winding swan pursue.

OLDER                           
1793 An Evening Walk  powerful song. A line of one of our older poets. [Back

ONES                            
1793 An Evening Walk  And her brown little-ones around her leads,

OPENING                         
1793 An Evening Walk  Thro' craggs, and forest glooms, and opening lakes,
1793 An Evening Walk  The Moon's fix'd gaze between the opening trees,

ORB                             
1793 An Evening Walk  A long blue bar it's aegis orb divides, 

ORDER                           
1793 An Evening Walk  Anon, in order mounts a gorgeous show

OU                              
1793 An Evening Walk  in the l'Agriculture ou les Georgiques Franoises, of M. Roossuet.

OVERCOME                        
1793 An Evening Walk  Unheeded Night has overcome the vales,