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God gave all
men all earth to love,
But since our hearts are small,
Ordained for each one spot should prove
Beloved over all;
That, as He watched Creation's birth,
So we, in godlike mood,
May of our love create our earth
And see that it is good.
So one shall
Baltic pines content,
As one some Surrey glade,
Or one that palm-grove's droned lament
Before Levuka's Trade.
Each to his choice, and I rejoice
The lot has fallen to me
In a fair ground--in a fair ground--
Yea, Sussex by the sea!
No tender-hearted
garden crowns,
No bosomed woods adorn
Our blunt, bow-headed, whale backed Downs,
But gnarled and writhen thorn--
Bare slopes where chasing shadows skim,
And, through the gaps revealed,
Belt upon belt, the wooded dim,
Blue goodness of the Weald.
Clean of officious
fence or hedge,
Half-wild and wholly tame,
The wise turf cloaks the white cliff edge,
As when the Romans came.
What sign of those that fought and died
At shift of sword and sword?
The barrow and the camp abide,
The sunlight and the sward.
Here leaps
ashore the full Sou'west
All heavey-winged with brine,
Here lies above the folded crest
The Channel's leaden line;
And here the sea-frogs lap and cling,
And here, each warning each,
The sheep-bells and the ship-bells ring,
Along the hidden beach.
We have no
waters to delight
Our broad and brookless vales--
Only the dewpond on the height
Unfed, that never fails--
Whereby no tattered herbage tells
Which way the season flies--
Only our close-bit thyme that smells
Like dawn in Paradise.
Here, through
the strong and shadeless days
The tinkling silence thrills;
Or little, lost, Down churches praise
The Lord who made the hills:
But here the Old Gods guard their round,
And in her secret heart,
The heathen kingdom Wilfrid found
Dreams, as she dwells, apart.
Though all
the rest were all my share,
With equal soul I'd see
Her nine-and-thirty sisters fair,
Yet none more fair than she.
Choose ye your need from Thames to Tweed,
And I will choose instead
Such lands as lie 'twixt Rake and Rye,
Black Down and Beachy Head.
I will go out
against the sun
Where the rolled scarp retires
And the Long Man of Wilmington
Looks naked toward the shires;
And east till doubling Rother crawls
To find the fickle tide,
By dry and sea-forgotten walls,
Our ports of stranded pride.
I will go north
about the shaws
And the deep ghylls that breed
Huge oaks and old, the which we hold
No more than Sussex weed;
Or south where windy Piddinghoe's
Begilded dolphin veers
And red beside wide banked Ouse
Lie down our Sussex steers.
So to the land
our hearts we give
Till the sure magic strike,
And Memory, Use and Love make live
Us and our fields alike--
That deeper than our speech and thought,
Beyond our reason's sway,
Clay of the pit whence we were wrought
Yearns to its fellow-clay.
God gives all
men all earth to love,
But since man's heart is small,
Ordains for each one spot shall prove
Beloved over all.
To each his choice, and I rejoice
The lot has fallen to me
In a fair ground--in a fair ground--
Yea, Sussex by the sea!
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