Whether upon the garden seat You lounge with your uplifted feet Under the May's whole Heaven of blue; Or whether on the sofa you, Do some soft corner occupy: Take you this volume in your hands And enter into other lands, For lo! (as children feign) suppose You, hunting in the garden rows, Or in the lumbered attic, or The cellar -- a nail-studded door And dark, descending stairway found That led to kingdoms underground: There standing, you should hear with ease Strange birds a-singing, or the trees Swing in big robber woods, or bells On many fairy citadels: There passing through (a step or so Neither mamma nor nurse need know!) From your nice nurseries you would pass Like Alice through the Looking-Glass Or Gerda following Little Ray, To wondrous countries far away. Well, and just so this volume can Transport each little maid or man Presto from where they live away Where other children used to play. As from the house your mother sees You playing round the garden trees, So you may see, if you but look Through the windows of this book Another child, far, far away And in another garden, play. But do not think you can at all, By knocking on the window, call, That child to hear you. He intent Is still on his play-business bent. He does not hear, he will not look, Nor yet be lured out of this book. For long ago, the truth to say, He has grown up and gone away; And it is but a child of air That lingers in the garden there. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...JOHN BURNS OF GETTYSBURG by FRANCIS BRET HARTE STRANGE MEETINGS: 1 by HAROLD MONRO A BETTER ANSWER (TO CHLOE JEALOUS) by MATTHEW PRIOR THE LOTOS-EATERS by ALFRED TENNYSON THE IVORY GATE: DIRGE by THOMAS LOVELL BEDDOES AN ELEGY ON SIR THOMAS OVERBURY; POISONED IN THE TOWER OF LONDON by WILLIAM BROWNE (1591-1643) THE SPHINX by HENRY HOWARD BROWNELL |