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Home  »  The Complete Poetical Works by William Wordsworth  »  THE FRENCH AND THE SPANISH GUERILLAS

THE FRENCH AND THE SPANISH GUERILLAS


HUNGER, and sultry heat, and nipping blast From bleak hill-top, and length of march by night Through heavy swamp, or over snow-clad height– These hardships ill-sustained, these dangers past, The roving Spanish Bands are reached at last, Charged, and dispersed like foam: but as a flight Of scattered quails by signs do reunite, So these,–and, heard of once again, are chased With combinations of long-practised art And newly-kindled hope; but they are fled– 10 Gone are they, viewless as the buried dead: Where now?–Their sword is at the Foeman’s heart; And thus from year to year his walk they thwart, And hang like dreams around his guilty bed. 1810.