I climbed that hill while peering over. When I looked down, up laughed a clover. I saw a spider, sunlight-pressed. His heart was in the clover, His feet were in its dew, A strip of wind within his breast, A piece of sky -- his shoe. I must call this Life -- I said, Ran down the hill and crept to bed. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...NEBUCHADNEZZAR: OR EATING GRASS by EDGAR LEE MASTERS EGERTON MANUSCRIPT: 102 by THOMAS WYATT ON THE DEATH OF MRS. (NOW LADY) THROCKMORTON'S BULLFINCH by WILLIAM COWPER TWO VOYAGERS by EMILY DICKINSON TO THE PIOUS MEMORY OF THE YOUNG LADY MRS. ANNE KILLIGREW by JOHN DRYDEN THE LOST SHEEP by SARAH PRATT MCCLAIN GREENE ON THE 'VITA NUOVA' OF DANTE by DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI THE SURPRISE AT TICONDEROGA [MAY 10, 1775] by MARY ANNA PHINNEY STANSBURY |