The Sister Arts - British Gardening, Painting, & Poetry (1700-1832)
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Picturesque > Poetry
1.John Dalton ( 1709-1763) - from A Descriptive Poem, Addressed to Two Ladies, at their Return from Viewing the Mines, near Whitehaven
2. Seward - Sonnet - Laid in the drawer of the thatched shed by the brook at Plas Nwydd, the Villa of the Right Hon. Lady Eleanor Butler, and Miss Ponsonby, in Llangollen Vale
3.Joseph Warton (1722-1800) - from The Enthusiast: or The Lover of Nature
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 



2. "Laid in the drawer of the thatched shed by the brook at Plas Nwydd, the Villa of the Right Hon. Lady Eleanor Butler, and Miss Ponsonby, in Llangollen Vale"
Written in Autumn 1799

Seward

STRANGER, when o'er yon slant, warm field no cloud
Steals,---at its foot, the verge of a wild brook,
In tangled dell, where sun-beams never look,
Press this screen'd seat, and mark the waters crowd
Close to the cliff down their steep channel rude;
Leaping o'er rugged stones, that aye provoke
Foam and hoarse murmur; while the pendant oak
Frowns o'er the little, clamorous, lonely flood.­---
Impetuous Deva's honours yield to thine,
Dear brook, for O! thy scanty billows lave 10
Friendship and Fancy's consecrated shrine;
And thou may'st tell the stream of mightier wave,
Here oft they muse the noontide hours away,
Who gild thy vale with intellectual ray.