Shall I have jealous thoughts to nurse, When I behold a rich man's house? Not though his windows, thick as stars, Number the days in every year; I, with one window for each month, Am rich in four or five to spare. But when I count his shrubberies, His fountains there, and clumps of trees, Over the palings of his park I leap with my primeval blood; Down wild ravines to Ocean's rocks, Clean through the heart of No-man's Wood. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THEN LAUGH by BERTHA ADAMS BACKUS EUROPE A PROPHECY by WILLIAM BLAKE PATIENCE TAUGHT BY NATURE by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING ANTIQUITY OF FREEDOM by WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT THE LOVER'S MESSAGE; SONG by JOHN DRYDEN PEARLS OF THE FAITH: 28. AS-BAZIR by EDWIN ARNOLD PEARLS OF THE FAITH: 68. AL-KADAR by EDWIN ARNOLD CHORUS OF A SONG THAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN WRITTEN BY ALBERT CHEVALIER by HENRY MAXIMILIAN BEERBOHM |