@3Crab@1 WHERE oxen do low and apples do grow, Where corn is sown and grass is mown, Where pigeons do fly and rooks nestle high, Fate give me for life a place; @3Gill@1. Where hay is well cocked and udders are stroked, Where duck and drake cry quack, quack, quack, Where turkeys lay eggs and sows suckle pigs, Oh, there I would pass my days. @3Crab@1 On nought we will feed @3Gill@1. But what we do breed; @3Crab@1 And wear on our backs @3Gill@1. The wool of our flocks. @3Crab@1 And though linen feel @3Gill@1. Rough, spun from the wheel, 'Tis cleanly, though coarse it comes. @3Crab@1 Town follies and cullies, and Mollies and Dollies, For ever adieu and for ever; @3Gill@1. And beaus that in boxes lie nuzzling their doxies, In wigs that hang down to their bums. @3Crab@1 Adieu, the Pall Mall, the Park and Canal, St. James's Square and flaunters there, The gaming-house too, where high dice and low Are managed by all degrees. @3Gill@1. Goodbye to the knight was bubbled last night, That keeps a blowze and beats his spouse, And now in great haste, to pay what he lost, Sends home to cut down the trees. @3Crab@1 And hey for the lad @3Gill@1. Improves ev'ry clod, @3Crab@1 That ne'er set his hand @3Gill@1. To bill or to bond, @3Crab@1 Nor barters his flocks @3Gill@1. For wine or the pox, To chouse him of half his days; @3Crab@1 But fishing and fowling, hunting and bowling, His pastimes are ever and ever, @3Gill@1. Whose lips when ye buss 'em Smell like the bean-blossom; Ah, he 'tis shall have my praise. @3Crab@1 To taverns where grow sour apple and sloe A long adieu, and farewell too The house of the great, whose cook has no meat And butler can't quench my thirst; @3Gill@1. Goodbye to the Change, where rantipoles range, Farewell cold tea and ratafie, Hyde Park too, where Pride in coaches will ride, Although they be choked with dust. @3Crab@1 Farewell the law-gown, @3Gill@1. The plague of the town, @3Crab@1 And friends of the Crown @3Gill@1. Cried up or run down. @3Crab@1 And city jackdaws, @3Gill@1. That fain would make laws To measure by yards and ells; @3Crab@1 Stockjobbers and swabbers, and toasters and roasters, For ever adieu and for ever; @3Gill@1. We find what you're doing and home we're a-going, And so you may ring the bells. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE ROAD TO AVIGNON by AMY LOWELL THE VALLEY BROOK by JOHN HOWARD BRYANT THE CORNELIAN by GEORGE GORDON BYRON ALL THAT'S PAST by WALTER JOHN DE LA MARE THE GARDEN OF PROSERPINE by ALGERNON CHARLES SWINBURNE IDYLLS OF THE KING: THE PASSING OF ARTHUR by ALFRED TENNYSON |