If age and sickness, poverty and pain, Should each assault me with alternate plagues, I know mankind is destin'd to complain, And I submit to torment and fatigues. The pious farmer, who ne'er misses pray'rs, With patience suffers unexpected rain; He blesses Heav'n for what its bounty spares, And sees, resign'd, a crop of blighted grain. But, spite of sermons, farmers would blaspheme, If a star fell to set their thatch on flame. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE HUMBLE-BEE by RALPH WALDO EMERSON HAARLEM HEIGHTS by ARTHUR GUITERMAN KNEE-DEEP IN JUNE by JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY ON SAMUEL ROGERS by GEORGE GORDON BYRON MORAG'S FAIRY GLEN by WILLIAM CAMERON TOWARDS DEMOCRACY: PART 4. A DREAM OF HUMAN LIFE by EDWARD CARPENTER INTIMATIONS by MADISON JULIUS CAWEIN |