Children At Play

 

I hear a merry noise indeed:

Is it the geese and ducks that take

Their first plunge in a quiet pond

That into scores of ripples break-

Or children make this merry sound?

 

I see an Oak tree, its strong back

Could not be bent an inch through all

Its leaves were stone, or iron even:

A boy, with many a lusty call,

Rides on a bough bareback through Heaven.

 

I see two children dig a hole

And plant a cherry-stone:

"We'll come to-morrow," one child said-

"And then the tree will be full grown,

and all its boroughs have cherries red."

 

Ah, children, what a life to lead:

You love the flowers, but when they're past

No flowers are missed by your bright eyes;

And when cold winter comes at last,

Snowflakes shall be your butterflies.