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<h2> RETURN TO NATURE </h2>
<p>My song is of that city which<br/>
Has men too poor and men too rich;<br/>
Where some are sick, too richly fed,<br/>
While others take the sparrows' bread:<br/>
Where some have beds to warm their bones,<br/>
While others sleep on hard, cold stones<br/>
That suck away their bodies' heat.<br/>
Where men are drunk in every street;<br/>
Men full of poison, like those flies<br/>
That still attack the horses' eyes.<br/>
Where some men freeze for want of cloth,<br/>
While others show their jewels' worth<br/>
And dress in satin, fur or silk;<br/>
Where fine rich ladies wash in milk,<br/>
While starving mothers have no food<br/>
To make them fit in flesh and blood;<br/>
So that their watery breasts can give<br/>
Their babies milk and make them live.<br/>
Where one man does the work of four,<br/>
And dies worn out before his hour;<br/>
While some seek work in vain, and grief<br/>
Doth make their fretful lives as brief.<br/>
Where ragged men are seen to wait<br/>
For charity that's small and late;<br/>
While others haunt in idle leisure,<br/>
Theatre doors to pay for pleasure.<br/>
No more I'll walk those crowded places<br/>
And take hot dreams from harlots' faces;<br/>
I'll know no more those passions' dreams,<br/>
While musing near these quiet streams;<br/>
That biting state of savage lust<br/>
Which, true love absent, burns to dust.<br/>
Gold's rattle shall not rob my ears<br/>
Of this sweet music of the spheres.<br/>
I'll walk abroad with fancy free;<br/>
Each leafy, summer's morn I'll see<br/>
The trees, all legs or bodies, when<br/>
They vary in their shapes like men.<br/>
I'll walk abroad and see again<br/>
How quiet pools are pricked by rain;<br/>
And you shall hear a song as sweet<br/>
As when green leaves and raindrops meet.<br/>
I'll hear the Nightingale's fine mood,<br/>
Rattling with thunder in the wood,<br/>
Made bolder by each mighty crash;<br/>
Who drives her notes with every flash<br/>
Of lightning through the summer's night.<br/>
No more I'll walk in that pale light<br/>
That shows the homeless man awake,<br/>
Ragged and cold; harlot and rake,<br/>
That have their hearts in rags, and die<br/>
Before that poor wretch they pass by.<br/>
Nay, I have found a life so fine<br/>
That every moment seems divine;<br/>
By shunning all those pleasures full,<br/>
That bring repentance cold and dull.<br/>
Such misery seen in days gone by,<br/>
That, made a coward, now I fly<br/>
To green things, like a bird. Alas!<br/>
In days gone by I could not pass<br/>
Ten men but what the eyes of one<br/>
Would burn me for no kindness done;<br/>
And wretched women I passed by<br/>
Sent after me a moan or sigh.<br/>
Ah, wretched days: for in that place<br/>
My soul's leaves sought the human face,<br/>
And not the Sun's for warmth and light—<br/>
And so was never free from blight.<br/>
But seek me now, and you will find<br/>
Me on some soft green bank reclined;<br/>
Watching the stately deer close by,<br/>
That in a great deep hollow lie<br/>
Shaking their tails with all the ease<br/>
That lambs can. First, look for the trees,<br/>
Then, if you seek me, find me quick.<br/>
Seek me no more where men are thick,<br/>
But in green lanes where I can walk<br/>
A mile, and still no human folk<br/>
Tread on my shadow. Seek me where<br/>
The strange oak tree is, that can bear<br/>
One white-leaved branch among the green—<br/>
Which many a woodman has not seen.<br/>
If you would find me, go where cows<br/>
And sheep stand under shady boughs;<br/>
Where furious squirrels shake a tree<br/>
As though they'd like to bury me<br/>
Under a leaf shower heavy, and<br/>
I laugh at them for spite, and stand.<br/>
Seek me no more in human ways—<br/>
Who am a coward since those days<br/>
My mind was burned by poor men's eyes,<br/>
And frozen by poor women's sighs.<br/>
Then send your pearls across the sea,<br/>
Your feathers, scent and ivory,<br/>
You distant lands—but let my bales<br/>
Be brought by Cuckoos, Nightingales,<br/>
That come in spring from your far shores;<br/>
Sweet birds that carry richer stores<br/>
Than men can dream of, when they prize<br/>
Fine silks and pearls for merchandise;<br/>
And dream of ships that take the floods<br/>
Sunk to their decks with such vain goods;<br/>
Bringing that traitor silk, whose soft<br/>
Smooth tongue persuades the poor too oft<br/>
From sweet content; and pearls, whose fires<br/>
Make ashes of our best desires.<br/>
For I have heard the sighs and whines<br/>
Of rich men that drink costly wines<br/>
And eat the best of fish and fowl;<br/>
Men that have plenty, and still growl<br/>
Because they cannot like kings live—<br/>
"Alas!" they whine, "we cannot save."<br/>
Since I have heard those rich ones sigh,<br/>
Made poor by their desires so high,<br/>
I cherish more a simple mind;<br/>
That I am well content to find<br/>
My pictures in the open air,<br/>
And let my walls and floors go bare;<br/>
That I with lovely things can fill<br/>
My rooms, whene'er sweet Fancy will.<br/>
I make a fallen tree my chair,<br/>
And soon forget no cushion's there;<br/>
I lie upon the grass or straw,<br/>
And no soft down do I sigh for;<br/>
For with me all the time I keep<br/>
Sweet dreams that, do I wake or sleep,<br/>
Shed on me still their kindly beams;<br/>
Aye, I am richer with my dreams<br/>
Than banks where men dull-eyed and cold<br/>
Without a tremble shovel gold.<br/>
A happy life is this. I walk<br/>
And hear more birds than people talk;<br/>
I hear the birds that sing unseen,<br/>
On boughs now smothered with leaves green;<br/>
I sit and watch the swallows there,<br/>
Making a circus in the air;<br/>
That speed around straight-going crow,<br/>
As sharks around a ship can go;<br/>
I hear the skylark out of sight,<br/>
Hid perfectly in all this light.<br/>
The dappled cows in fields I pass,<br/>
Up to their bosoms in deep grass;<br/>
Old oak trees, with their bowels gone,<br/>
I see with spring's green finery on.<br/>
I watch the buzzing bees for hours,<br/>
To see them rush at laughing flowers—<br/>
And butterflies that lie so still.<br/>
I see great houses on the hill,<br/>
With shining roofs; and there shines one,<br/>
It seems that heaven has dropped the sun.<br/>
I see yon cloudlet sail the skies,<br/>
Racing with clouds ten times its size.<br/>
I walk green pathways, where love waits<br/>
To talk in whispers at old gates;<br/>
Past stiles—on which I lean, alone—<br/>
Carved with the names of lovers gone;<br/>
I stand on arches whose dark stones<br/>
Can turn the wind's soft sighs to groans.<br/>
I hear the Cuckoo when first he<br/>
Makes this green world's discovery,<br/>
And re-creates it in my mind,<br/>
Proving my eyes were growing blind.<br/>
I see the rainbow come forth clear<br/>
And wave her coloured scarf to cheer<br/>
The sun long swallowed by a flood—<br/>
So do I live in lane and wood.<br/>
Let me look forward to each spring<br/>
As eager as the birds that sing;<br/>
And feed my eyes on spring's young flowers<br/>
Before the bees by many hours,<br/>
My heart to leap and sing her praise<br/>
Before the birds by many days.<br/>
Go white my hair and skin go dry—<br/>
But let my heart a dewdrop lie<br/>
Inside those leaves when they go wrong,<br/>
As fresh as when my life was young.<br/></p>
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