He spake with somewhat of a solemn tone,But when he ended there was in his face 200Such easy cheerfulness, a look so mild,That for a little time it stole awayAll recollection, and that simple talePassed from my mind like a forgotten sound.A while on trivial things we held discourse, 205To me soon tasteless. In my own despiteI thought or that poor woman as or oneWhom I had known and loved. He had rehearsedHer homely tale with such familiar power,With such an active countenance, an eye 210So busy, that the things of which he spakeSeemed present, and, attention now relaxed,There was a heartfelt chillness in my veins.I rose, and turning from that breezy shadeWent out into the open air, and stood 215To drink the comfort of the warmer sun.Long time I had not stayed ere, looking roundUpon that tranquil ruin, I returnedAnd begged of the old man that for my sakeHe would resume his story.He replied, 220It were a wantonness, and would demandSevere reproof, if we were men whose heartsCould hold vain dalliance with the miseryEven of the dead contented thence to drawA momentary pleasure, never marked 225By reason, barren of all future good.But we have known that there is often foundIn mournful thoughts, and always might be found,A power to virtue friendly; were’t not soI am a dreamer among men, indeed 230An idle dreamer, Tis a common taleBy moving accidents uncharactered,A tale of silent suffering, hardly clothedIn bodily form, and to the grosser senseBut ill adapted — scarcely palpable 235To him who does not think. But at your biddingI will proceed.While thus it fared with themTo whom this cottage till that hapless yearHad been a blessed home» it was my chanceTo travel in a country far remote; 240And glad I was when, halting by yon gateThat leads from the green lane, again I sawThese lofty elm-trees. Long I did not rest —With many pleasant thoughts I cheered my wayO'er the flat common. At the door arrived, 245I knocked, and when I entered, with the hopeOf usual greeting, Margaret looked at meA little while, then turned her head awaySpeechless, and sitting down upon a chairWept bitterly. I wist not what to do, 250Or how to speak to her. Poor wretch! At lastShe rose from off her seat — and then, oh sir!I cannot tell how she pronounced my name:With fervent love, and with a face of griefUnutterably helpless, and a look 255That seemed to cling upon me, she enquiredIf I had seen her husband. As she spakeA strange surprise and fear came to my heart,Nor had I power to answer ere she toldThat he had disappeared — just two months gone- 260He left his house: two wretched days had passed,And on the third by the first break of light,Within her casement full in view she sawA purse of gold. "I trembled at the sight",That placed it there, And on that very dayBy one, a stranger, from my husband sent,The tidings came that he had joined a troopOf soldiers going to a distant land.He left me thus. Poor man, he had not heart 270To take a farewell of me, and he fearedThat I should follow with my babes, and sinkBeneath the misery of a soldier's life”.This tale did Margaret tell with many tears,And when she ended I had little power 275To give her comfort, and was glad to takeSuch words of hope from her own mouth as servedTo cheer us both. But long we had not talkedEre we built up a pile of better thoughts,And with a brighter eye she looked around 280As if she had been shedding tears of joy.We parted. It was then the early spring;I left her busy with her garden tools,And well remember, o'er that fence she looked,And, while I paced along the footway path, 285Called our and sent a blessing after me,With tender cheerfulness, and with a voiceThat seemed the very sound of happy thoughts.I roved o'er many a hill and many a daleWith this my weary load, in heat'and cold, 290Through many a wood and many an open ground,In sunshine or in shade, in wet or fair,Now blithe, now drooping, as it might befall;My best companions now the driving windsAnd now the "trotting brooks" and whispering trees, 295And now the music of my own sad steps,With many a short-lived thought that passed betweenAnd disappeared. I came this way againTowards the wane of summer, when the wheatWas yellow, and the sofr and bladed grass 300Sprang up afresh and o'er the hayfield spreadIts tender green. When I had reached the doorI found that she was absent. In the shadeWhere we now sit I waited her return.Her cottage in its outward look appeared 305As cheerful as before, in any showOf neatness little changed — but that I thoughtThe honeysuckle crowded round the doorAnd from the wall hung down in heavier wreaths,And knots of worthless sconecrop started out 310Along the window's edge, and grew like weedsAgainst the lower panes. I turned asideAnd strolled into her garden, It was changed.The unprofitable bindweed spread his bellsFrom side to side, and with unwieldy wreaths 315Had dragged the rose from its sustaining wallAnd bent it down to earth31 The border tufts,Daisy, and thrift, and lowly camomile,And thyme, had straggled out into the pathsWhich they were used to deck.Ere this an hour 320Was wasted. Back I turned my restless steps,And as I walked before the door it chancedA stranger passed, and guessing whom I sought,He said that she was used to ramble far.The sun was sinking in the west, and now 325I sat with sad impatience. From withinHer solitary infant cried aloud.The spot though fair seemed very desolate,The longer I remained more desolate;And looking round I saw the corner-stones, 330Till then unmarked, on either side the doorWith dull red stains discoloured, and stuck o'erWith tufts and hairs of wool, as if the sheepThat feed upon the commons thither cameFamiliarly, and found a coaching-place 335Even at her threshold.The house-clock struck eight:I turned and saw her distant a few steps.Her face was pale and thin, her figure tooWas changed. As she unlocked the door she said,"It grieves me you have waited here so long, 340But in good truth I've wandered much of late,And sometimes — to my shame I speak — have needOf my best prayers to bring me back again."While on the board she spread our evening mealShe told me she had lost her elder child, 345That he for months had been a serving-boy,Apprenticed by the parish, — "I perceiveYou look at me, and you have cause. TodayI have been travelling far, and many daysAbout the fields I wander, knowing this 350Only, that what I seek I cannot find.And so I waste my time: for I am changed,And to myself, said she, "have done much wrong,And to this helpless infant, I have sleptWeeping, and weeping I have waked. My tears 355Have flowed as if my body were nut suchAs others are, and I could never die.But I am now in mind and in my heartMore easy, and I hope", said she, "that HeavenWill give me patience to endure the things 360Which I behold at home."