THESE are things that being possest Will make a life that's truly blest. Estate bequeath'd, not got with toil; A good hot fire, a grateful soil; No strife, warm clothes, a quiet soul; A strength entire, a body whole; Prudent simplicity, equal friends; A diet that no art commends; A night not drunk, and yet secure; A bed not sad, yet chaste and pure; Long sleeps to make the nights but short, A will to be but what thou art; Nought rather choose; contented lie, And neither fear nor wish to die. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A CLEVER WOMAN by MARY ELIZABETH COLERIDGE AN APRIL MORNING by WILLIAM WORDSWORTH TO MISS ANNA MARIA TRAVERS. AN EPISTLE FROM SCOTLAND by CHARLOTTE BRERETON ON THE MEANING OF THE WORD 'WRATH' AS APPLIED TO GOD IN SCRIPTURE by JOHN BYROM MAKING SOAP IN VERMONT by DANIEL LEAVENS CADY YWAIN AND GAWAIN: THE WINNING OF THE LADY OF THE FOUNTAIN by CHRETIEN DE TROYES TALES OF THE HALL: BOOK 22. THE VISIT CONCLUDED by GEORGE CRABBE |