Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
England: Vols. I–IV. 1876–79.
Wallingford
By William Blake AtkinsonW
Where the walls of old Wallingford break on the sight,
My fancy the scenes of the past will renew
Till the forms of my forefathers rise to my view.
Issue forth from its portals to join in the fight;
And past generations repeople the town,
As o’er it the castle’s high battlements frown.
In battle forlorn with the legions of Rome;
And the flaxen-haired Saxon defending the plain
Against the wild rush of the death-dealing Dane.
On whose brow are the laurels of Hastings still green;
And onward resistless his followers sweep
Till the proud flag of Normandy floats from the keep.
By the river an army is seen on each side;
But the high-swollen torrent bids bloodshed to cease,
And the factions of England are blended in peace.
Of Briton with Briton in mortal affray;
And the air rings aloud with a Puritan cheer
Or the answering shout of the gay cavalier.
Like the dreams of the night at the dawning of day;
And the feuds of old Wallingford rest and are still
As the ivy-crowned ruin that sleeps on its hill.
And the banners of battle are unfurléd no more;
While the husbandman ploughs and the meadow-grass waves,
Where forgotten the warriors lie in their graves.
Surrounded by fertile and prosperous lands;
And, crowned with antiquity, dwells at its ease,
Encircled by hills and embosomed in trees.
That its glories have with former times fled away;
And o’er its decay heave a pitying sigh
That the busy world passes it heedlessly by?
Yet still to thy country fulfilling thy part,
And rearing thy children, though humble they be,
To stand in the ranks of the land of the free:
Content in thy duty to seek for thy fame;
And so thy old age uneventfully fleet,
As calm as the river that flows at thy feet.