"Might I a small estate possess, Sufficient to supply My wants, and keep me from distress, From scorn and infamy; Content with this, ye Gods, I'd ask no more: But oh, 'tis wretched to be @3very poor.@1 My house convenient, warm and neat, But very small should be; Room just to study, sleep and eat, Is full enough for me: And but so far from London let it stand, As that its noise and hurry mayn't offend." | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A QUOI BON DIRE by CHARLOTTE MEW THE NINE LITTLE GOBLINS by JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY KARMA by EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON SONGS OF TRAVEL: 45. TO S.R. CROCKETT by ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON ORANGE BUDS BY MAIL FROM FLORIDA by WALT WHITMAN IMAGES: 1 by RICHARD ALDINGTON |