I would arise and in a dream go on -- Not very far, not very far -- and then Lie down amid the sunny grass again, And fall asleep till night-time or next dawn. In sleepy self-sufficiency I'd turn; I'd seek new comfort and be hard to please -- Far in a meadow by an isle of trees, All summer long amid the grass and fern. Forests would have to be all round about, And the mead silent, and the grasses deep, Else I might not gain such a tireless sleep! I could not slumber if the wains were out! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ON SIR PALMES FAIRBORNE'S TOMB, IN WESTERMINSTER ABBEY by JOHN DRYDEN THE ARTIST PHILOSOPHER by DAISY MAUD BELLIS ON JAMES GRACIE, DEAN OF GUILD by ROBERT BURNS A BOOK OF AIRS: SONG 41 by THOMAS CAMPION THE ELDERLY GENTLEMAN by GEORGE CANNING TOWARDS DEMOCRACY: PART 4. O CHILD OF URANUS by EDWARD CARPENTER TO THE QUEENES MOST EXCELLENT MAJESTIE by ELIZABETH (TANFIELD) CARY |