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- GOOD morning, Life--and all
- Things glad and beautiful.
- My pockets nothing hold,
- But he that owns the gold,
- The Sun, is my great friend--
- His spending has no end.
- Hail to the morning sky,
- Which bright clouds measure high;
- Hail to you birds whose throats
- Would number leaves by notes;
- Hail to you shady bowers,
- And you green field of flowers.
- Hail to you women fair,
- That make a show so rare
- In cloth as white as milk--
- Be't calico or silk:
- Good morning, Life--and all
- Things glad and beautiful.
- W.H. Davies

- WHEN primroses are out in Spring,
- And small, blue violets come between;
- When merry birds sing on boughs green,
- And rills, as soon as born, must sing;
- When butterflies will make side-leaps,
- As though escaped from Nature's hand
- Ere perfect quite; and bees will stand
- Upon their heads in fragrant deeps;
- When small clouds are so silvery white
- Each seems a broken rimmed moon--
- When such things are, this world too soon,
- For me, doth wear the veil of night.
- W.H. Davies

- WHAT is this life if, full of care,
- We have no time to stand and stare.
- No time to stand beneath the boughs
- And stare as long as sheep or cows.
- No time to see, when woods we pass,
- Where squirrels hide their nuts in grass.
- No time to see, in broad daylight,
- Streams full of stars, like skies at night.
- No time to turn at Beauty's glance,
- And watch her feet, how they can dance.
- No time to wait till her mouth can
- Enrich that smile her eyes began.
- A poor life this if, full of care,
- We have no time to stand and stare.
- W.H. Davies

- NOW, joy is born of parents poor,
- And pleasure of our richer kind;
- Though pleasure's free, she cannot sing
- As sweet a song as joy confined.
- Pleasure's a Moth, that sleeps by day
- And dances by false glare at night;
- But Joy's a Butterfly, that loves
- To spread its wings in Nature's light.
- Joy's like a Bee that gently sucks
- Away on blossoms its sweet hour;
- But pleasure's like a greedy Wasp,
- That plums and cherries would devour.
- Joy's like a Lark that lives alone,
- Whose ties are very strong, though few;
- But Pleasure like a Cuckoo roams,
- Makes much acquaintance, no friends true.
- Joy from her heart doth sing at home,
- With little care if others hear;
- But pleasure then is cold and dumb,
- And sings and laughs with strangers near.
- W.H. Davies

- MY walls outside must have some flowers,
- My walls within must have some books;
- A house that's small; a garden large,
- And in it leafy nooks.
- A little gold that's sure each week;
- That comes not from my living kind,
- But from a dead man in his grave,
- Who cannot change his mind.
- A lovely wife, and gentle too;
- Contented that no eyes but mine
- Can see her many charms, nor voice
- To call her beauty fine.
- Where she would in that stone cage live,
- A self-made prisoner, with me;
- While many a wild bird sang around,
- On gate, on bush, on tree.
- And she sometimes to answer them,
- In her far sweeter voice than all;
- Till birds, that loved to look on leaves,
- Will doat on a stone wall.
- With this small house, this garden large,
- This little gold, this lovely mate,
- With health in body, peace in heart--
- Show me a man more great.
- W.H. Davies

- WHEN I had money, money, O!
- I knew no joy till I went poor;
- For many a false man as a friend
- Came knocking at my door.
- Then felt I like a child that holds
- A trumpet that he must not blow
- Because a man is dead; I dared
- Not speak to let this false world know.
- Much have I thought of life, and seen
- How poor men's hearts are ever light;
- And how their wives do hum like bees
- About their work from morn till night.
- So, when I hear these poor ones laugh,
- And see the rich ones coldly frown--
- Poor men, think I, need not go up
- So much as rich men should come down.
- When I had money, money, O!
- My many friends proved all untrue;
- But now I have no money, O!
- My friends are real though very few.
- W.H. Davies

- A WEEK ago I had a fire
- To warm my feet, my hands and face;
- Cold winds, that never make a friend,
- Crept in and out of every place.
- Today the fields are rich in grass,
- And buttercups in thousands grow;
- I'll show the world where I have been--
- With gold-dust seen on either shoe.
- Till to my garden back I come,
- Where bumble-bees for hours and hours
- Sit on their soft, fat, velvet bums,
- To wriggle out of hollow flowers.
- W.H. Davies

- HERE'S an example from
- A Butterfly;
- That on a rough, hard rock
- Happy can lie;
- Friendless and all alone
- On this unsweetened stone.
- Now let my bed be hard
- No care take I;
- I'll make my joy like this
- Small Butterfly;
- Whose happy heart has power
- To make a stone a flower.
- W.H. Davies

- IT was the Rainbow gave thee birth,
- And left thee all her lovely hues;
- And, as her mother's name was Tears,
- So runs it in my blood to choose
- For haunts the lonely pools, and keep
- In company with trees that weep.
- Go you and, with such glorious hues,
- Live with proud peacocks in green parks;
- On lawns as smooth as shining glass,
- Let every feather show its marks;
- Get thee on boughs and clap thy wings
- Before the windows of proud kings.
- Nay, lovely Bird, thou art not vain;
- Thou hast no proud, ambitious mind;
- I also love a quiet place
- That's green, away from all mankind;
- A lonely pool, and let a tree
- Sigh with her bosom over me.
- W.H. Davies

- COME, let us find a cottage, love,
- That's green for half a mile around;
- To laugh at every grumbling bee,
- Whose sweetest blossom's not yet found.
- Where many a bird shall sing for you,
- And in your garden build its nest:
- They'll sing for you as though their eggs
- Were lying in your breast,
- My love--
- Were lying warm in your soft breast.
- 'Tis strange how men find time to hate,
- When life is all too short for love;
- But we, away from our own kind,
- A different life can live and prove.
- And early on a summer's morn,
- As I go walking out with you,
- We'll help the sun with our warm breath
- To clear away the dew,
- My love,
- To clear away the morning dew.
- W.H. Davies

- WHILE joy gave clouds the light of stars,
- That beamed wher'er they looked;
- And calves and lambs had tottering knees,
- Excited, while they sucked;
- While every bird enjoyed his song,
- Without one thought of harm or wrong--
- I turned my head and saw the wind,
- Not far from where I stood,
- Dragging the corn by her golden hair,
- Into a dark and lonely wood.
- W.H. Davies

- MY mind has thunderstorms,
- That brood for heavy hours:
- Until they rain me words;
- My thoughts are drooping flowers
- And sulking, silent birds.
- Yet come, dark thunderstorms,
- And brood your heavy hours;
- For when you rain me words,
- My thoughts are dancing flowers
- And joyful singing birds.
- W.H. Davies

- SING out, my soul, thy songs of joy;
- Sing as a happy bird will sing
- Beneath a rainbow's lovely arch
- In the spring.
- Think not of death in thy young days;
- Why shouldst thou that grim tyrant fear?
- And fear him not when thou art old,
- And he is near.
- Strive not for gold, for greedy fools
- Measure themselves by poor men never;
- Their standard still being richer men,
- Makes them poor ever.
- Train up thy mind to feel content,
- What matters then how low thy store?
- What we enjoy, and not possess,
- Makes rich or poor.
- Filled with sweet thought, then happy I
- Take not my state from other's eyes;
- What's in my mind -- not on my flesh
- Or theirs -- I prize.
- Sing, happy soul, thy songs of joy;
- Such as a Brook sings in the wood,
- That all night has been strengthened by
- Heaven's purer flood.
- W.H. Davies

- I HEAR leaves drinking rain;
- I hear rich leaves on top
- Giving the poor beneath
- Drop after drop;
- 'Tis a sweet noise to hear
- These green leaves drinking near.
- And when the Sun comes out,
- After this Rain shall stop,
- A wondrous Light will fill
- Each dark, round drop;
- I hope the Sun shines bright;
- 'Twill be a lovely sight.
- W.H. Davies

- IF I were gusty April now,
- How I would blow at laughing Rose;
- I'd make her ribbons slip their knots,
- And all her hair come loose.
- If I were merry April now,
- How I would pelt her cheeks with showers;
- I'd make carnations, rich and warm,
- Of her vermillion flowers.
- Since she will laugh in April's face
- No matter how he rains or blows --
- Then O that I wild April were,
- To play with laughing Rose.
- W.H. Davies

- AS I walked down the waterside
- This silent morning, wet and dark;
- Before the cocks in farmyards crowed,
- Before the dogs began to bark;
- Before the hour of five was struck
- By old Westminster's mighty clock:
- As I walked down the waterside
- This morning, in the cold damp air,
- I was a hundred women and men
- Huddled in rags and sleeping there:
- These people have no work, thought I,
- And long before their time they die.
- That moment, on the waterside,
- A lighted car came at a bound;
- I looked inside, and saw a score
- Of pale and weary men that frowned;
- Each man sat in a huddled heap,
- Carried to work while fast asleep.
- Ten cars rushed down the waterside
- Like lighted coffins in the dark;
- With twenty dead men in each car,
- That must be brought alive by work:
- These people work too hard, thought I,
- And long before their time they die.
- W.H. Davies

- SHE walks as lightly as the fly
- Skates on the water in July.
- To hear her moving petticoat
- For me is music's highest note.
- Stones are not heard, when her feet pass,
- No more than tumps of moss or grass.
- When she sits still, she's like the flower
- To be a butterfly next hour.
- The brook laughs not more sweet, when he
- Trips over pebbles suddenly.
- My Love, like him, can whisper low --
- When he comes where green cresses grow.
- She rises like the lark, that hour
- He goes halfway to meet a shower.
- A fresher drink is in her looks
- Than Nature gives me, or old books.
- When I in my Love's shadow sit,
- I do not miss the sun one bit.
- When she is near, my arms can hold
- All that's worth having in this world.
- And when I know not where she is,
- Nothing can come but comes amiss.
- W.H. Davies

- I SAW this day sweet flowers grow thick --
- But not one like the child did pick.
- I heard the packhounds in green park --
- But no dog like the child heard bark.
- I heard this day bird after bird --
- But not one like the child has heard.
- A hundred butterflies saw I --
- But not one like the child saw fly.
- I saw the horses roll in grass --
- But no horse like the child saw pass.
- My world this day has lovely been --
- But not like what the child has seen.
- W.H. Davies

- THEY lived apart for three long years,
- Bill Barnes and Nell his wife;
- He took his joy from other girls,
- She led a wicked life.
- Yet ofttimes she would pass his shop,
- With some strange man awhile;
- And, looking, meet her husband's frown
- With her malicious smile.
- Until one day, when passing there,
- She saw her man had gone;
- And when she saw the empty shop,
- She fell down with a moan.
- And when she heard that he had gone
- Five thousand miles away;
- And that she's see his face no more,
- She sickened from that day.
- To see his face was health and life,
- And when it was denied,
- She could not eat, and broke her heart --
- It was for love she died.
- W.H. Davies

- GO, little boy,
- Fill thee with joy;
- For Time gives thee
- Unlicensed hours,
- To run in fields,
- And roll in flowers.
- A little boy
- Can life enjoy;
- If but to see
- The horses pass,
- When shut indoors
- Behind the glass.
- Go, little boy,
- Fill thee with joy;
- Fear not, like man,
- The kick of wrath,
- That you do lie
- In some one's path.
- Time is to thee
- Eternity,
- As to a bird
- Or butterfly;
- And in that faith
- True joy doth lie.
- W.H. Davies

- AND now, when merry winds do blow,
- And rain makes trees look fresh,
- An overpowering staleness holds
- This mortal flesh.
- Though well I love to feel the rain,
- And be by winds well blown --
- The mystery of mortal life
- Doth press me down.
- And, In this mood, come now what will,
- Shine Rainbow, Cuckoo call;
- There is no thing in Heaven or Earth
- Can lift my soul.
- I know not where this state comes from --
- No cause for grief I know;
- The Earth around is fresh and green,
- Flowers near me grow.
- I sit between two fair rose trees;
- Red roses on my right,
- And on my left side roses are
- A lovely white.
- The little birds are full of joy,
- Lambs bleating all the day;
- The colt runs after the old mare,
- And children play.
- And still there comes this dark, dark hour --
- Which is not borne of Care;
- Into my heart it creeps before
- I am aware.
- W.H. Davies

- I PRAY you, Sadness, leave me soon,
- In sweet invention thou art poor!
- Thy sister, Joy can make ten songs
- While thou art making four.
- One hour with thee is sweet enough;
- But when we find the whole day gone
- And no created thing is left --
- We mourn the evil done.
- Thou art too slow to shape thy thoughts
- In stone, on canvas, or in song;
- But Joy, being full of active heat,
- Must do some deed ere long.
- Thy sighs are gentle, sweet thy tears;
- But if thou canst not help a man
- To prove in substance what he feels --
- Then givve me Joy, who can.
- Therefore sweet Sadness, leave me soon,
- Let thy bright sister, Joy, come more;
- For she can make ten lovely songs
- While thou art making four.
- W.H. Davies

- ONE night when I went down
- Thames' side, in London Town,
- A heap of rags saw I,
- And sat me down close by.
- That thing could shout and bawl,
- But showed no face at all;
- When any steamer passed
- And blew a loud shrill blast,
- That heap of rags would sit
- And make a sound like it;
- When struck the clock's deep bell,
- It made those peals as well.
- When winds did moan around,
- It mocked them with that sound;
- When all was quiet, it
- Fell into a strange fit;
- Would sigh, and moan, and roar,
- It laughed, and blessed, and swore.
- Yet that poor thing, I know,
- Had neither friend nor foe;
- Its blessin or its curse
- Made no one better or worse.
- I left it in that place --
- The thing that showed no face,
- Was it a man that had
- Suffered till he went mad?
- So many showers and not
- One rainbow in the lot?
- Too many bitter fears
- To make a pearl from tears?
- W.H. Davies

- THOU dost not fly, thou art not perched,
- The air is all around:
- What is it that can keep thee set,
- From falling to the ground?
- The concentration of thy mind
- Supports thee in the air;
- As thou dost watch the small young birds,
- With such a deadly care.
- My mind has such a hawk as thou,
- It is an evil mood;
- It comes when there's no cause for grief,
- And on my joys doth brood.
- Then do I see my life in parts;
- The earth receives my bones,
- The common air absorbs my mind --
- It knows not flowers from stones.
- W.H. Davies

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