One shimmering opal is all the air And the sun like a young girl's loosened hair Covers with pools of liquid yellow Window-sill, floor, and bed and pillow! And I touch the secret -- yet have it not. It is -- God! I've forgotten what -- Yet the lovely madness wherewith we're mad, For no king's penny is to be had! Ha! Monsieur Maggot and my Lord Rat More's in this business than you guess at! The road-dust sleeps in the summer-heat And the hot noon drowses on ripened-wheat, And from weed to weed in the burnt-up grass Heavy-winged butterflies flutter past. Ha! Monsieur Maggot! Ha! my Lord Rat, There's more in this business than you guess at! The moon floats high like a silver barge, And the bracken ferns grow strange and large, And the bull-rushes forget to shiver As she pours her magic on meadow and river; And the tall pond-reeds, where the cattle cross, Stand silent; and silent dreams the moss; And the hazel-wood as the owl hoots by Is too moon-tranced to heed his cry -- Ha! Monsieur Maggot and my Lord Rat, Here's something for you to squinny at! We pine and pine -- but by Holy Rood There's something here not understood -- And we are not yet the Devil's food! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ON THE ROAD TO CHORRERA by ARLO BATES WILLIE BREW'D A PECK O' MAUT by ROBERT BURNS ON A CHILD SLEEPING IN CYNTHIA'S LAP by PHILIP AYRES SOLILOQUIES OF A SMALL-TOWN TAXI-DRIVER: ON THE WRITING OF POETRY by EDGAR BARRATT WRESTLING by LOUISA SARAH BEVINGTON PSALM 117 by OLD TESTAMENT BIBLE THE CANTERBURY TALES: THE PARDONER'S TALE by GEOFFREY CHAUCER |