O what a life is this I lead, Far from the hum of human greed; Where Crows, like merchants dressed in black, Go leisurely to work and back; Where Swallows leap and dive and float, And Cuckoo sounds his cheerful note; Where Skylarks now in clouds do rave, Half mad with fret that their souls have By hundreds far more joyous notes Than they can manage with their throats. The ploughman's heavy horses run The field as if in fright -- for fun, Or stand and laugh in voices shrill; Or roll upon their backs until The sky's kicked small enough -- they think; Then to a pool they go and drink. The kine are chewing their old cud, Dreaming, and never think to add Fresh matter that will taste -- as they Lie motionless, and dream away. I hear the sheep a-coughing near; Like little children, when they hear Their elders' sympathy -- so these Sheep force their coughs on me, and please; And many a pretty lamb I see, Who stops his play on seeing me, And runs and tells his mother then. Lord, who would live in towns with men, And hear the hum of human greed -- With such a life as this to lead? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE WILD RIDE by LOUISE IMOGEN GUINEY WHEN HE WOULD HAVE HIS VERSES READ by ROBERT HERRICK FOR THE YOUNGEST by CHARLES WESLEY TO THE MEN OF KENT by WILLIAM WORDSWORTH A MOTH FOUND ON THE FLOOR by EDNA M. BECKER THE LOVE SONNETS OF PROTEUS: 26. ASKING FOR HER HEART. CHRISTMAS by WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT ON THE STAIR by RICHARD EUGENE BURTON |