NAY, chide me not because my pipe oft sings Of country doings and of common things: Of sun-steeped fields where men forestall the day To gather up in mows the winter's hay; Of kine called musically at the bars, And swaying home beneath the early stars; Of woods divinely cool, where moss and fern Do haunt the pleasant places of the burn; Of berry pickings, and of harvest fun Beneath the moon when day-work all is done; Of fall forgatherings, when nuts are thick, And boys beat out the burrs with lusty stick; Of storm-bound labors and of snowings-in, When water lacks, and low is every bin; Of cutting ice upon the waveless lake, Where skaters whirl and frosty music make; Of these, and more, the happenings manifold, Whereby the countryside's full tale is told. Nay, chide me not, for these are things I see And know and love -- the very heart of me. So did Theocritus, and still we hear His airs Sicilian and his message clear. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE DEATH OF GRANT by AMBROSE BIERCE TRUE UNTIL DEATH by ROBERT BURNS ON SEEING THE ELGIN MARBLES by JOHN KEATS A SPINNING SONG by JOHN FRANCIS O'DONNELL A WORKING PARTY by SIEGFRIED SASSOON MOCK EPITAPH ON MR. AND MRS. ESTLIN by ANNA LETITIA BARBAULD LILIES: 27. THE WAVE-TOSSED VESSEL by GEORGE BARLOW (1847-1913) |