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by Walter De la Mare (1873 - 1956)

The enchanted hill
Language: English 
From height of noon, remote and still 
The sun shines on the empty hill. 
No mist, no wind, above, below ; 
No living thing strays to and fro. 
No bird replies to bird on high, 
Cleaving the skies with echoing cry. 
Like dreaming water, green and wan, 
Glassing the snow of mantling swan, 
Like a clear jewel encharactered 
"With secret symbol of line and word, 
Asheen, unruffled,, slumbrous, still, 
The sunlight streams on the empty hill 
But soon as Night's dark shadows ride 
Across its shrouded Eastern side, 
When at her kindling, clear and full, 
Star beyond star stands visible ; 
Then course pale phantoms, fleet-foot deer 
Lap of its waters icy-clear. 
Mounts the large moon, and pours her beams 
On bright-fish-flashing, singing streams. 
Voices re-echo. Coursing by,
Horsemen, like clouds, wheel silently. 
Glide then from out their pitch-black lair 
Beneath the dark's ensilvered arch, 
Witches becowled into the air; 
And iron pine and emerald larch, 
Tents of delight for ravished bird, 
Are by loud music thrilled and stirred. 
Winging the light, with silver feet, 
Beneath their bowers of fragrance met, 
In dells of rose and meadowsweet, 
In mazy dance the fairies flit; 
While drives his share the Ploughman high 
Athwart the daisy-powdered sky: 
Till far away,, in thickening dew, 
Piercing the Eastern shadows through, 
Rilling in crystal clear and still, 
Light 'gins to tremble on the hill. 
And like a mist on faint winds borne, 
Silent, forlorn, wells up the morn. 
Then the broad sun with burning beams 
Steeps slope and peak and gilded streams. 
Then no foot stirs ; the brake shakes not; 
Soundless and wet in its green grot 
As if asleep, the leaf hangs limp; 
The white dews drip untrembling down, 
From bough to bough, orblike, unblown ; 
And in strange quiet, shimmering and still, 
Morning enshrines the empty hill. 

Please note: this text, provided here for educational and research use, is in the public domain in Canada and the U.S., but it may still be copyright in other legal jurisdictions. The LiederNet Archive makes no guarantee that the above text is public domain in your country. Please consult your country's copyright statutes or a qualified IP attorney to verify whether a certain text is in the public domain in your country or if downloading or distributing a copy constitutes fair use. The LiederNet Archive assumes no legal responsibility or liability for the copyright compliance of third parties.

Text Authorship:

  • by Walter De la Mare (1873 - 1956), "The enchanted hill", appears in Down-adown-derry: a book of fairy poems, first published 1922 [author's text checked 1 time against a primary source]

Musical settings (art songs, Lieder, mélodies, (etc.), choral pieces, and other vocal works set to this text), listed by composer (not necessarily exhaustive):

  • by John Weinzweig (b. 1913), "The enchanted hill", <<1973 [sung text not yet checked]

Researcher for this text: Emily Ezust [Administrator]

This text was added to the website: 2010-04-24
Line count: 49
Word count: 300

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