Charles Swain (poet)
poet (1801-1874)
Charles Swain (4 January 1801 – 22 September 1874) was an English poet and engraver, born in Manchester. He was honorary professor of poetry at the Manchester Royal Institution, and in 1856 was granted a civil list pension. His friends included Robert Southey. Swain's epitaph for John Horsefield is noted by English Heritage as an element of their rationale for listing Horsefield's tomb as a Grade II monument.
Quotes
edit- Time to me this truth has taught
('Tis a treasure worth revealing),
More offend from want of thought,
Than from any want of feeling.- "Want of Thought", quoted in Notes and Queries, 5th s., vol. 4 (11 December 1875), p. 464
- Tripping down the field-path,
Early in the morn,
There I met my own love
'Midst the golden corn;
Autumn winds were blowing,
As in frolic chase,
All her silken ringlets
Backward from her face;
Little time for speaking
Had she, for the wind,
Bonnet, scarf, or ribbon,
Ever swept behind.Still some sweet improvement
In her beauty shone;
Every graceful movement
Won me,—one by one! [...]
Little time for wooing
Had we, for the wind
Still kept on undoing
What we sought to bind. [...]
Still I see the field-path;—
Would that I could see
Her whose graceful beauty
Lost is now to me!- "Tripping Down the Field Path", English Melodies (1849)