KATE rose up early as fresh as a lark, Almost in time to see vanish the dark; Jack rather later, bouncing from bed, Saw fade on the dawn's cheek the last flush of red: Yet who knows When the wind rose? Kate went to watch the new lambs at their play And stroke the white calf born yesterday; Jack sought the wood where trees grow tall As who would learn to swarm them all: Yet who knows Where the wind goes? Kate has sown candy-tuft, lupins and peas, Carnations, forget-me-not and heart's-ease; Jack has sown cherry-pie, marigold, Love-that-lies-bleeding and snap-dragons bold; But who knows What the wind sows? Kate knows a thing or two useful at home, Darns like a fairy, and churns like a gnome; Jack is a wise man at shaping a stick, Once he's in the saddle the pony may kick. But hark to the wind how it blows! None comes, none goes, None reaps or mows, No friends turn foes, No hedge bears sloes, And no cock crows, But the wind knows! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...HALF-WAKING by WILLIAM ALLINGHAM THE DONG WITH A LUMINOUS NOSE by EDWARD LEAR THE WORLD: A CHILD'S SONG by WILLIAM BRIGHTY RANDS THE DYING SWAN by ALFRED TENNYSON THE NEW YEAR by ALFRED TENNYSON TO WAKEN AN OLD LADY by WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS THE QUEEN'S RIDE; AN INVITATION by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH |