By green and windblown rippled slopes where cattle graze in summer sun; beneath blue skies when larks sing shrill and rabbits by the hedgerows run. When meadowsweet and columbine bedeck the lea like ocean foam; we soft return like shadows lost to seek our old ancestral home.
Within the tree-lined borderlands we wait until the day is done; βtil passing fancies leave us be and once again our time is come. When doors and gates are closed and locked we slip within as night winds roam; and talk in whispered secrecy of times in our ancestral home.
No more within cold fireplace do fallen logs burn bright and fair; from panelled walls in sullen oils dark portraits of the long-dead stare. On bowing shelves of oak repose forgotten tales in leathern tome; unread by men for centuries, hid deep in our ancestral home.
And through the marches of the night we drift from room to balcony; recalling days of childhood lost, the laughter of sweet memory. Yet all too soon we must be gone βere birds again chorale the dawn; and disappear like shadows soft that fly from our ancestral home.
At Oakwell Hall, an Elizabethan manor house in West Yorkshire.