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We walked along, while bright and red Uprose the morning sun; And Matthew stopped, he looked, and said `The will of God be done!'
A village schoolmaster was he, With hair of glittering grey; As blithe a man as you could see On a spring holiday.
And on that morning, through the grass And by the steaming rills We travelled merrily, to pass A day among the hills.
`Our work,' said I, `was well begun; Then, from thy breast what thought, Beneath so beautiful a sun, So sad a sigh has brought?'
A second time did Matthew stop; And fixing still his eye Upon the eastern mountain-top, To me he made reply:
`Yon cloud with that long purple cleft Brings fresh into my mind A day like this, which I have left Full thirty years behind.
`And just above yon slope of corn Such colours, and no other, Were in the sky, that April morn, Of this the very brother.
`With rod and line I sued the sport Which that sweet season gave, And, to the churchyard come, stopped short Beside my daughter's grave.
`Nine summers had she scarcely seen, The pride of all the vale; And then she sang: -she would have been A very nightingale.
`Six feet in earth my Emma lay; And yet I loved her more - For so it seemed, -than till that day I e'er had loved before.
`And turning from her grave, I met Beside the churchyard yew A blooming girl, whose hair was wet With points of morning dew.
`A basket on her head she bare; Her brow was smooth and white: To see a child so very fair, It was a pure delight!
`No fountain from its rocky cave E'er tripped with foot so free; She seemed as happy as a wave That dances on the sea.
`There came from me a sigh of pain Which I could ill confine; I looked at her, and looked again: And did not wish her mine!'
- Matthew is in his grave, yet now Methinks I see him stand As that moment, with a bough Of wilding in his hand.
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