I knew the tree where slept the crows, And on the water's brim I climbed among the hemlock boughs To watch the fishes swim. I knew beside the swollen rill What flowers to bloom would burst, And where, upon the south-sloped hill, The berries ripened first. Each violet tuft, each cowslip green, Each daisy in the lea I counted one by one, for they Were kith and kin to me. I knew the moles that dared to claim The banished beaver's huts, And sat on mossy logs to watch The squirrels crack their nuts. And they winked slyly at me, too, But never fled away, For in their little hearts they knew That I was wild as they. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE LOVE-SICK FROG by MOTHER GOOSE ASTROPHEL AND STELLA: 52 by PHILIP SIDNEY THE LOAN by SABINE BARING-GOULD TO HIS DEAR FRIEND MR. JOHN EMELY by WILLIAM BOSWORTH MONTGOMERIE'S PEGGY by ROBERT BURNS THE LIFE-FORCE by RHYS CARPENTER |