The Old Mansion-House [Eclogue]
by
STRANGER.
Old friend! why you seem bent on parish duty,
Breaking the highway stones,–and ’tis a task
Somewhat too hard methinks for age like yours.
OLD MAN.
Why yes! for one with such a weight of years
Upon his back. I’ve lived here, man and boy,
In this same parish, near the age of man
For I am hard upon threescore and ten.
I can remember sixty years ago
The beautifying of this mansion here
When my late Lady’s father, the old Squire
Came to the estate.
STRANGER.
Why then you have outlasted
All his improvements, for you see they’re making
Great alterations here.
OLD MAN.
Aye-great indeed!
And if my poor old Lady could rise up–
God rest her soul! ‘twould grieve her to behold
The wicked work is here.
STRANGER.
They’ve set about it
In right good earnest. All the front is gone,
Here’s to be turf they tell me, and a road
Round to the door. There were some yew trees too
Stood in the court.
OLD MAN.
Aye Master! fine old trees!
My grandfather could just remember back
When they were planted there. It was my task
To keep them trimm’d, and ’twas a pleasure to me!
All strait and smooth, and like a great green wall!
My poor old Lady many a time would come
And tell me where to shear, for she had played
In childhood under them, and ’twas her pride
To keep them in their beauty. Plague I say
On their new-fangled whimsies! we shall have
A modern shrubbery here stuck full of firs
And your pert poplar trees;–I could as soon
Have plough’d my father’s grave as cut them down!
STRANGER.
But ’twill be lighter and more chearful now,
A fine smooth turf, and with a gravel road
Round for the carriage,–now it suits my taste.
I like a shrubbery too, it looks so fresh,
And then there’s some variety about it.
In spring the lilac and the gueldres rose,
And the laburnum with its golden flowers
Waving in the wind. And when the autumn comes
The bright red berries of the mountain ash,
With firs enough in winter to look green,
And show that something lives. Sure this is better
Than a great hedge of yew that makes it look
All the year round like winter, and for ever
Dropping its poisonous leaves from the under boughs
So dry and bare!
OLD MAN.
Ah! so the new Squire thinks
And pretty work he makes of it! what ’tis
To have a stranger come to an old house!
STRANGER.
It seems you know him not?
OLD MAN.
No Sir, not I.
They tell me he’s expected daily now,
But in my Lady’s time he never came
But once, for they were very distant kin.
If he had played about here when a child
In that fore court, and eat the yew-berries,
And sat in the porch threading the jessamine flowers,
That fell so thick, he had not had the heart
To mar all thus.
STRANGER.
Come–come! all a not wrong.
Those old dark windows–
OLD MAN.
They’re demolish’d too–
As if he could not see thro’ casement glass!
The very red-breasts that so regular
Came to my Lady for her morning crumbs,
Won’t know the window now!
STRANGER.
Nay they were high
And then so darken’d up with jessamine,
Harbouring the vermine;–that was a fine tree
However. Did it not grow in and line
The porch?