<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title type="main">The Letters of Robert Bloomfield and His Circle</title><title type="subordinate">A Romantic Circles Electronic Edition</title><author><name>Robert Bloomfield (1766–1823)</name></author><editor>Tim Fulford</editor><sponsor>Romantic Circles</sponsor><respStmt><resp>General Editor, </resp><name>Neil Fraistat</name></respStmt><respStmt><resp>General Editor, </resp><name>Steven E. Jones</name></respStmt><respStmt><resp>General Editor, </resp><name>Carl Stahmer</name></respStmt><respStmt><resp>Technical Editor</resp><name>Laura Mandell</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><idno type="edition">elegy</idno><publisher>Romantic Circles, http://www.rc.umd.edu, University of
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						keyboard</p><p>Dashes have been rendered as —</p></hyphenation><normalization method="markup"><p>Bloomfield's spelling has not been regularized.</p><p>Writing in other hands appearing on these manuscripts has been indicated as
						such, the content recorded in brackets.</p></normalization><normalization><p>&amp; has been used for the ampersand sign.</p><p>£ has been used for £, the pound sign</p><p>All other characters, those with accents, non-breaking spaces, etc., have
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					Bloomfield<note place="foot" type="headnote" resp="editors"><bibl><author>Nathaniel Bloomfield</author>, <title level="a">Elegy on the
								Enclosure of Honington Green</title> from <title level="m">An Essay
								on War, in Blank Verse; Honington Green, a Ballad . . . and Other
								Poems</title> (<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>: <publisher>Hurst, Vernor
								and Hood</publisher>, <date when="1803">1803</date>), <biblScope type="pp">pp. 29-40</biblScope></bibl>.</note></head><lb/><p rend="indent6"> 1</p><lg type="stanza"><l rend="indent3"> IMPROVEMENT extends its domain;</l><l rend="indent4"> The Shepherds of Britain deplore</l><l rend="indent3"> That the Coulter has furrow'd each plain,</l><l rend="indent4"> And their calling is needful no more.</l><l rend="indent3"> 'Enclosing Land doubles its use;</l><l rend="indent4"> 'When cultur'd, the heath and the moor</l><l rend="indent3"> 'Will the Riches of Ceres produce,</l><l rend="indent4"> 'Yet feed as large flocks as before.'</l></lg><lb/><p rend="indent6"> 2</p><lg type="stanza"><l rend="indent3"> Such a lucrative maxim as this</l><l rend="indent4"> The Lords of the Land all pursue,</l><l rend="indent3"> For who such advantage wou'd miss?</l><l rend="indent4"> Self-int'rest we all keep in view.</l><l rend="indent3"> By it, they still more wealth amass,</l><l rend="indent4"> Who possess'd great abundance before;</l><l rend="indent3"> It gives pow'r to the Great, but alas!</l><l rend="indent4"> Still poorer it renders the Poor.</l></lg><lb/><p rend="indent6"> 3</p><lg type="stanza"><l rend="indent3"> Taste spreads her refinements around,</l><l rend="indent4"> Enriching her favourite Land</l><l rend="indent3"> With prospects of beautified ground,</l><l rend="indent4"> Where, cinctur'd, the spruce Villas stand;</l><l rend="indent3"> On the causeways, that never are foul,</l><l rend="indent4"> Marshal'd bands may with measur'd pace tread;</l><l rend="indent3"> The soft Car of Voluptuousness roll,</l><l rend="indent4"> And the proud Steed of Greatness parade.</l></lg><lb/><p rend="indent6"> 4</p><lg type="stanza"><l rend="indent3"> Those fenc'd ways that so even are made,</l><l rend="indent4"> The pedestrian trav'ller bemoans;</l><l rend="indent3"> He no more the green carpet may tread,</l><l rend="indent4"> But plod on, 'midst the gravel and stones:</l><l rend="indent3"> And if he would rest with his load,</l><l rend="indent4"> No green hillock presents him a seat,</l><l rend="indent3"> But long, hard, tiresome sameness of road</l><l rend="indent4"> Fatigues both the eye and the feet.</l></lg><lb/><p rend="indent6"> 5</p><lg type="stanza"><l rend="indent3"> Sighs speak the poor Labourers' pain,</l><l rend="indent4"> While the new mounds and fences they rear,</l><l rend="indent3"> Intersecting their dear native plain,</l><l rend="indent4"> To divide to each rich Man his share;</l><l rend="indent3"> It cannot but grieve them to see,</l><l rend="indent4"> Where so freely they rambled before,</l><l rend="indent3"> What a bare narrow track is left free</l><l rend="indent4"> To the foot of the unportion'd Poor.</l></lg><lb/><p rend="indent6"> 6</p><lg type="stanza"><l rend="indent3"> The proud City's gay wealthy train,</l><l rend="indent4"> Who nought but refinements adore,</l><l rend="indent3"> May wonder to hear me complain</l><l rend="indent4"> That Honington Green is no more;</l><l rend="indent3"> But if to the Church you e'er went,</l><l rend="indent4"> If you knew what the village has been,</l><l rend="indent3"> You will sympathize, while I lament</l><l rend="indent4"> The Enclosure of Honington Green.</l></lg><lb/><p rend="indent6"> 7</p><lg type="stanza"><l rend="indent3"> That no more upon Honington Green</l><l rend="indent4"> Dwells the Matron whom most I revere,</l><l rend="indent3"> If by pert observation unseen,</l><l rend="indent4"> I e'en now could indulge a fond tear.</l><l rend="indent3"> E'er her bright Morn of Life was o'ercast,</l><l rend="indent4"> When my senses first woke to the scene,</l><l rend="indent3"> Some short happy hours she had past</l><l rend="indent4"> On the margin of Honington Green.</l></lg><lb/><p rend="indent6"> 8</p><lg type="stanza"><l rend="indent3"> Her Parents with Plenty were blest,</l><l rend="indent4"> And nume'rous her Children, and young,</l><l rend="indent3"> Youth's Blossoms her cheek yet possest,</l><l rend="indent4"> And Melody woke when she sung:</l><l rend="indent3"> A Widow so youthful to leave,</l><l rend="indent4"> (Early clos'd the blest days he had seen)</l><l rend="indent3"> My Father was laid in his grave,</l><l rend="indent4"> In the Church-yard on Honington Green.</l></lg><lb/><p rend="indent6"> 9</p><lg type="stanza"><l rend="indent3"> I faintly remember the Man,</l><l rend="indent4"> Who died when I was but a Child;</l><l rend="indent3"> But far as my young mind could scan,</l><l rend="indent4"> His manners were gentle and mild:</l><l rend="indent3"> He won infant ears with his lore,</l><l rend="indent4"> Nor let young ideas run wild, </l><l rend="indent3"> Tho' his hand the severe rod of pow'r</l><l rend="indent4"> Never sway'd o'er a trembling Child.</l></lg><lb/><p rend="indent6"> 10</p><lg type="stanza"><l rend="indent3"> Not anxiously careful for pelf,</l><l rend="indent4"> Melancholic and thoughtful, his mind</l><l rend="indent3"> Look'd inward and dwelt on itself,</l><l rend="indent4"> Still pensive, pathetic, and kind;</l><l rend="indent3"> Yet oft in despondency drown'd,</l><l rend="indent4"> He from friends, and from converse would fly,</l><l rend="indent3"> In weeping a luxury found,</l><l rend="indent4"> And reliev'd others' woes with a sigh.</l></lg><lb/><p rend="indent6"> 11</p><lg type="stanza"><l rend="indent3"> In solitude long would he stay,</l><l rend="indent4"> And long lock'd in silence his tongue;</l><l rend="indent3"> Then he humm'd an elegiac lay,</l><l rend="indent4"> Or a Psalm penitential he sung:</l><l rend="indent3"> But if with his Friends he regal'd,</l><l rend="indent4"> His Mirth, as his Griefs, knew no bounds;</l><l rend="indent3"> In no Tale of Mark Sargent he fail'd,</l><l rend="indent4"> Nor in all Robin Hood's Derry-downs.</l></lg><lb/><p rend="indent6"> 12</p><lg type="stanza"><l rend="indent3"> Thro' the poor Widow's long lonely years,</l><l rend="indent4"> Her Father supported us all: </l><l rend="indent3"> Yet sure she was loaded with cares,</l><l rend="indent4"> Being left with six Children so small.</l><l rend="indent3"> Meagre Want never lifted her latch;</l><l rend="indent4"> Her cottage was still tight and clean;</l><l rend="indent3"> And the casement beneath its low thatch</l><l rend="indent4"> Commanded a view o'er the Green.</l></lg><lb/><p rend="indent6"> 13</p><lg type="stanza"><l rend="indent3"> O'er the Green, where so often she blest</l><l rend="indent4"> The return of a Husband or Son,</l><l rend="indent3"> Coming happily home to their rest,</l><l rend="indent4"> At night, when their labour was done:</l><l rend="indent3"> Where so oft in her earlier years,</l><l rend="indent4"> She, with transport maternal, has seen</l><l rend="indent3"> (While plying her housewifely cares)</l><l rend="indent4"> Her Children all safe on the Green.</l></lg><lb/><p rend="indent6"> 14</p><lg type="stanza"><l rend="indent3"> The Green was our pride through the year,</l><l rend="indent4"> For in Spring, when the wild flow'rets blew,</l><l rend="indent3"> Tho' many rich pastures were near,</l><l rend="indent4"> Where Cowslips and Daffodils grew;</l><l rend="indent3"> And tho' such gallant flow'rs were our choice,</l><l rend="indent4"> It was bliss interrupted by Fear—</l><l rend="indent3"> The Fear of their Owner's dread voice,</l><l rend="indent4"> Harshly bawling, 'You've no business here.'</l></lg><lb/><p rend="indent6"> 15</p><lg type="stanza"><l rend="indent3"> While the Green, tho' but Daisies its boast,</l><l rend="indent4"> Was free as the Flow'rs to the Bee;</l><l rend="indent3"> In all seasons the Green we lov'd most,</l><l rend="indent4"> Because on the Green we were free;</l><l rend="indent3"> 'Twas the prospect that first met my eyes,</l><l rend="indent4"> And Memory still blesses the scene;</l><l rend="indent3"> For early my heart learnt to prize</l><l rend="indent4"> The Freedom of Honington Green.</l></lg><lb/><p rend="indent6"> 16</p><lg type="stanza"><l rend="indent3"> No Peasant had pin'd at his lot,</l><l rend="indent4"> Tho' new fences the lone Heath enclose:</l><l rend="indent3"> For, alas! the blest days are forgot,</l><l rend="indent4"> When poor Men had their Sheep and their Cows.</l><l rend="indent3"> Still had Labour been blest with Content,</l><l rend="indent4"> Still Competence happy had been,</l><l rend="indent3"> Nor Indigence utter'd a plaint,</l><l rend="indent4"> Had Avarice spar'd but the Green.</l></lg><lb/><p rend="indent6"> 17</p><lg type="stanza"><l rend="indent3"> Not Avarice itself could be mov'd</l><l rend="indent4"> By desire of a morsel so small:</l><l rend="indent3"> It could not be lucre he lov'd;</l><l rend="indent4"> But to rob the poor folk of their all.</l><l rend="indent3"> He in wantonness ope'd his wide jaws,</l><l rend="indent4"> As a Shark may disport with the Fry;</l><l rend="indent3"> Or a Lion, when licking his paws,</l><l rend="indent4"> May wantonly snap at a Fly.</l></lg><lb/><p rend="indent6"> 18</p><lg type="stanza"><l rend="indent3"> Could there live such an envious Man,</l><l rend="indent4"> Who endur'd not the halcyon scene?</l><l rend="indent3"> When the infantine Peasantry ran,</l><l rend="indent4"> And roll'd on the daisy-deck'd Green:</l><l rend="indent3"> Ah! sure 'twas fell Envy's despite,</l><l rend="indent4"> Lest Indigence tasted of Bliss,</l><l rend="indent3"> That sternly decreed they've no right</l><l rend="indent4"> To innocent pleasure like this.</l></lg><lb/><p rend="indent6"> 19</p><lg type="stanza"><l rend="indent3"> Tho' the Youth of to-day must deplore</l><l rend="indent4"> The rough mounds that now sadden the scene,</l><l rend="indent3"> The vain stretch of Misanthropy's Power,</l><l rend="indent4"> The Enclosure of Honington Green.</l><l rend="indent3"> Yet when not a green turf is left free,</l><l rend="indent4"> When not one odd nook is left wild,</l><l rend="indent3"> Will the Children of Honington be</l><l rend="indent4"> Less blest than when I was a Child?</l></lg><lb/><p rend="indent6"> 20</p><lg type="stanza"><l rend="indent3"> No!…Childhood shall find the scene fair,</l><l rend="indent4"> Then here let me cease my complaint;</l><l rend="indent3"> Still shall Health be inhal'd with the Air,</l><l rend="indent4"> Which at Honington cannot be taint:</l><l rend="indent3"> And tho' Age may still talk of the Green,</l><l rend="indent4"> Of the Heath, and free Commons of yore,</l><l rend="indent3"> Youth shall joy in the new-fangled scene,</l><l rend="indent4"> And boast of <hi rend="ital">that</hi> change we deplore.</l></lg><lb/><p rend="indent6"> 21</p><lg type="stanza"><l rend="indent3"> Dear to me was the wild-thorny Hill,</l><l rend="indent4"> And dear the brown Heath's sober scene;</l><l rend="indent3"> And Youth shall find Happiness still,</l><l rend="indent4"> Tho' he roves not on Common or Green:</l><l rend="indent3"> Tho' the pressure of Wealth's lordly hand</l><l rend="indent4"> Shall give Emulation no scope,</l><l rend="indent3"> And tho' all the appropriate Land</l><l rend="indent4"> Shall leave Indigence nothing to hope.</l></lg><lb/><p rend="indent6"> 22</p><lg type="stanza"><l rend="indent3"> So happily flexile Man's make,</l><l rend="indent4"> So pliantly docile his mind,</l><l rend="indent3"> Surrounding impressions we take,</l><l rend="indent4"> And bliss in each circumstance find.</l><l rend="indent3"> The Youths of a more polish'd Age</l><l rend="indent4"> Shall not with these rude Commons to see;</l><l rend="indent3"> To the Bird that's inur'd to the Cage,</l><l rend="indent4"> It would not be Bliss to be free.</l></lg></div></body></text></TEI>