Back To The Land By Violet Jacob

    Out in the upland places,
        I see both dale and down,
    And the ploughed earth with open scores
        Turning the green to brown.

    The bare bones of the country
        Lie gaunt in winter days,
    Grim fastnesses of rock and scaur,
        Sure, while the year decays.

    And, as the autumn withers,
        And the winds strip the tree,
    The companies of buried folk
        Rise up and speak with me; –

    From homesteads long forgotten,
        From graves by church and yew,
    They come to walk with noiseless tread
        Upon the land they knew; –

    Men who have tilled the pasture
        The writhen thorn beside,
    Women within grey vanished walls
        Who bore and loved and died.

    And when the great town closes
        Upon me like a sea,
    Daylong, above its weary din,
        I hear them call to me.

    Dead folk, the roofs are round me,
        To bar out field and hill,
    And yet I hear you on the wind
        Calling and calling still;

    And while, by street and pavement,
        The day runs slowly through,
    My soul, across these haunted downs,
        Goes forth and walks with you.

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