In Troops they march, till thousands, thousands past.
Yet gentle stream, thou’rt still the same.
Always going, never gone;
Yet do’st all constancy disclaim,
Wildly dancing to thine own murmuring tuneful song;
Old as time, as love and beauty young.
Jane Barker (1652–1732) was an English novelist, poet, and supporter of James II, the last Catholic king of England. Fleeing England after James II was deposed during the Glorious Revolution (1688), she wrote and published under her own name a number of novels about her experiences as a woman during these times, includingExiliusor The Banish’d Roman (1715). As a poet, Barker expressed her faith in God in complex and ornate figures and conceits, such as “Sitting by a Rivulet” exhibits.
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