THE
FALL
OF
NEEDWOOD.
Derby:
PRINTED AT THE OFFICE OF J. DREWRY.
1808.
A long pastoral ode that celebrates a particular woodland through vivid natural description and mythic personification. It moves between close observation of trees, flowers, birds, and seasonal changes and imaginative scenes where nymphs, sylvan deities, and the Genius of the place animate the landscape. The poem praises rural leisure, hunting, and traditional country life while mourning legal enclosure and human encroachment that diminish the forest. Interwoven reflections consider beauty, fidelity, and the mingling of joy and loss, ending in elegiac remembrance.