![]() |
||
Poets •
Biographies •
Poems by Themes •
Random Poem •
The Rating of Poets • The Rating of Poems |
||
|
Poem by Charles Lamb The Reaper's Child If you go to the field where the reapers now bind The sheaves of ripe corn, there a fine little lass, Only three months of age, by the hedge-row you'll find, Left alone by its mother upon the low grass. While the mother is reaping, the infant is sleeping; Not the basket that holds the provision is less By the hard-working reaper, than this little sleeper, Regarded, till hunger does on the babe press. Then it opens its eyes, and it utters loud cries, Which its hard-working mother afar off will hear; She comes at its calling, she quiets its squalling, And feeds it, and leaves it again without fear. When you were as young as this field-nursëd daughter, You were fed in the house, and brought up on the knee; So tenderly watched, thy fond mother thought her Whole time well bestowed in nursing of thee. Charles Lamb Charles Lamb's other poems:
![]() 1369 Views |
|
|
||
English Poetry. E-mail eng-poetry.ru@yandex.ru |