
A striking poetic portrait unfolds in a quiet coastal hamlet where the sea’s relentless tide shapes every life. The narrator pulls back the bucolic veil, revealing a community beset by poverty, smugglers, and the harsh rhythms of fieldwork, while the parish workhouse and a dying pauper whisper of deeper woes. Vivid images of withered rye, stubborn weeds, and the stark shoreline convey the stark contrast between romantic verses and the villagers’ daily grind.
Through a blend of lyrical description and keen observation, the piece gives voice to the aging laborer, the weary priest, and the restless youth, each caught in a web of necessity and hope. Listeners are invited to hear the raw cadence of a world where nature’s beauty is both a blessing and a burden, and where truth replaces the glitter of idealized pastoral song.
Language
en
Duration
~50 minutes (48K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-03-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1754–1832
Known for bringing ordinary village life into English poetry, this 18th-century writer gave readers something unusual for his time: sharp, unsentimental portraits of working people and coastal communities. His verse is plainspoken, observant, and often surprisingly modern in its realism.
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by George Crabbe

by George Crabbe

by George Crabbe

by George Crabbe

by George Crabbe

by George Crabbe

by George Crabbe

by George Crabbe