Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes. England: Vols. IIV. 187679. | | | | Inglewood Forest | | Inglewood Forest | | William Wordsworth (17701850) |
| | Suggested by a View from an Eminence in Inglewood Forest |
| THE FOREST huge of ancient Caledon | |
| Is but a name; nor more is Inglewood, | |
| That swept from hill to hill, from flood to flood: | |
| On her last thorn the nightly moon has shone; | |
| Yet still, though unappropriate wild be none, | 5 |
| Fair parks spread wide where Adam Bell might deign | |
| With Clym o the Clough, were they alive again, | |
| To kill for merry feast their venison. | |
| Nor wants the holy abbots gliding shade | |
| His church with monumental wreck bestrewn; | 10 |
| The feudal warrior-chief, a ghost unlaid, | |
| Hath still his castle, though a skeleton, | |
| That he may watch by night, and lessons con | |
| Of power that perishes and rights that fade. | | | |
|
|
|