When
I was young, I was out of tune with the herd: My only love was for the hills and mountains.
Unwitting I fell into the Web of the World's dust And was not free until my thirtieth
year. The migrant bird longs for the old wood: The fish in the tank thinks of
its native pool. I had rescued from wildness a patch of the Southern Moor And, still
rustic, I returned to field and garden. My ground covers no more than ten acres: My thatched cottage has
eight or nine rooms. Elms and willows cluster by the eaves: Peach trees and plum
trees grow before the hall. Hazy, hazy the distant hamlets of men. Steady the
smoke of the half-deserted village, A dog barks somewhere in the deep lanes,
A cock crows at the top of the mulberry tree. At gate and courtyard — no murmur of the World's dust:
In the empty rooms — leisure and deep stillness. Long I lived checked by the bars
of a cage: Now I have turned again to Nature and Freedom.