Before she has her floor swept Or her dishes done, Any day you'll find her A-sunning in the sun! It's long after midnight Her key's in the lock, And you never see her chimney smoke Till past ten o'clock! She digs in her garden With a shovel and a spoon, She weeds her lazy lettuce By the light of the moon, She walks up the walk Like a woman in a dream, She forgets she borrowed butter And pays you back cream! Her lawn looks like a meadow, And if she mows the place She leaves the clover standing And the Queen Anne's lace! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...AN ORDER FOR A PICTURE by ALICE CARY THE RIVER by RALPH WALDO EMERSON AD PATRIAM by CLINTON SCOLLARD THE INDIAN SERENADE by PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY THE SCHOOL GIRL by WILLIAM HENRY VENABLE A BURIAL-PLACE by WILLIAM ALLINGHAM RELIGIOUS ISOLATION, TO A REPUBLICAN FRIEND by MATTHEW ARNOLD LATIMER AND RIDLEY, BURNED AT THE STAKE IN OXFORD, 1555 by WILLIAM EDMONSTOUNE AYTOUN |