Oh, to be in England Now that April's there, And whoever wakes in England Sees some morning, in despair, There's a horrible fog i' the heart o' the town, And the greasy pavement is damp and brown; While the rain-drop falls from the laden bough, In England now! And after April when May follows, How foolish seem the returning swallows. Hark! how the east wind sweeps along the street, And how we give one universal sneeze! The hapless lambs at thought of mint-sauce bleat, And ducks are conscious of the coming peas. Lest you should think the Spring is really present, A biting frost will come to make things pleasant, And though the reckless flowers begin to blow, They'd better far have nestled down below; And English spring sets men and women frowning, Despite the rhapsodies of Robert Browning. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE SECRET by KATHERINE MANSFIELD EVENTIDE by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON SUGGESTED BY THE COVER OF A VOLUME OF KEATS'S POEMS by AMY LOWELL DOMEDAY BOOK: JOHN CAMPBELL AND CARL EATON by EDGAR LEE MASTERS YOUNG BULLFROGS by CARL SANDBURG PLAINT OF THE DISGUSTED BRITON IN THE STATES by GEORGE SANTAYANA |