him lift thy silly lamb!
Hear it cry, “How blest I am!
Here is love, and love is rest!”
In his arms thy silly lamb
See him gather to his breast!

The Donkey in the Cart to the Horse in the Carriage

I

I say! hey! cousin there! I mustn’t call you brother!
Yet you have a tail behind, and I have another!
You pull, and I pull, though we don’t pull together:
You have less hardship, and I have more weather!

II

Your legs are long, mine are short; I am lean, you are fatter;
Your step is bold and free, mine goes pitter-patter;
Your head is in the air, and mine hangs down like lead⁠—
But then my two great ears are so heavy on my head!

III

You need not whisk your stump, nor turn away your nose;
Poor donkeys ain’t so stupid as rich horses may suppose!
I could feed in any manger just as well as you,
Though I don’t despise a thistle⁠—with sauce of dust and dew!

IV

T’other day a bishop’s cob stopped before me in a lane,
With a tail as broad as oil-cake, and a close-clipped hoggy mane;
I stood sideways to the hedge, but he did not want to pass,
And he was so full of corn he didn’t care about the grass.

V

Quoth the cob, “You are a donkey of a most peculiar breed!
You’ve just eaten up a thistle that was going fast to seed!
If you had but let it be, you might have raised a crop!
To many a coming dinner you have put a sad stop!”

VI

I told him I was hungry, and to leave one of ten
Would have spoiled my best dinner, the one I wanted then.
Said the cob, “I ought to know the truth about dinners,
I don’t eat on roadsides like poor tramping sinners!”

VII

“Why don’t you take it easy? You are working much too hard!
In the shafts you’ll die one day, if you’re not upon your guard!
Have pity on your friends: work seems to you delectable,
But believe me such a cart⁠—excuse me⁠—’s not respectable!”

VIII

I told him I must trot in the shafts where I was put,
Nor look round at the cart, but set foremost my best foot;
It was rather rickety, and the axle wanted oil,
But I always slept at night with the deep sleep of toil!

IX

“All very fine,” he said, “to wag your ears and parley,
And pretend you quite despise my bellyfuls of barley!
But with blows and with starving, and with labour over-hard,
By spurs! a week will see you in the knacker’s yard.”

X

I thanked him for his counsel, and said I thought I’d take it, really,
If he’d spare me half a feed out of four feeds daily.
He tossed his head at that: “Now don’t be cheeky!” said he;
“When I find I’m getting fat, I’ll think of you: keep steady.”

XI

“Good-bye!” I said⁠—and say, for you are such another!
Why, now I look at you, I see you are his brother!
Yes, thank you for your kick: ’twas all that you could spare,
For, sure, they clip and singe you very, very bare!

XII

My cart it is upsets you! but in that cart behind
There’s no dirt or rubbish, no bags of gold or wind!
There’s potatoes there, and wine, and corn, and mustard-seed,
And a good can of milk, and some honey too, indeed!

XIII

Few blows I get, some hay, and of water many a draught:
I tell you he’s no coster that sits upon my shaft!
And for the knacker’s yard⁠—that’s not my destined bed:
No donkey ever yet saw himself there lying dead.

Room to Roam

Strait is the path? He means we must not roam?
Yes; but the strait path leads into a boundless home.

Cottage Songs

I

By the Cradle

Close her eyes: she must not peep!
Let her little puds go slack;
Slide away far into sleep:
Sis will watch till she comes back!

Mother’s knitting at the door,
Waiting till the kettle sings;
When the kettle’s song is o’er
She will set the bright tea-things.

Father’s busy making hay
In the meadow by the brook,
Not so very far away⁠—
Close its peeps, it needn’t look!

God is round us everywhere⁠—
Sees the scythe glitter and rip;
Watches baby gone somewhere;
Sees how mother’s fingers skip!

Sleep, dear baby; sleep outright:
Mother’s sitting just behind:
Father’s only out of sight;
God is round us like the wind.

II

Sweeping the Floor

Sweep and sweep and sweep the floor,
Sweep the dust, pick up the pin;
Make it clean from fire to door,
Clean for father to come in!

Mother said that God goes sweeping,
Looking, sweeping with a broom,
All the time that we are sleeping,
For a shilling in the room:

Did he drop it out of glory,
Walking far above the birds?
Or did parson make the story
For the thinking afterwards?

If I were the swept-for shilling
I would hearken through the gloom;
Roll out fast, and fall down willing
Right before the sweeping broom!

III

Washing the Clothes

This is the way we wash the clo’es
Free from dirt and smoke and clay!
Through and through the water flows,
Carries Ugly right away!

This is the way we bleach the clo’es:
Lay them out upon the green;
Through and through the sunshine goes,
Makes them white as well as clean!

This is the way we dry the clo’es:
Hang them on the bushes about;
Through and through the soft wind blows,
Draws and drives the wetness out!

Water, sun, and windy air
Make the clothes clean, white, and sweet
Lay them now in lavender
For the Sunday, folded neat!

IV

Drawing Water

Dark, as if it would not tell,
Lies the water, still and cool:
Dip the bucket in the well,
Lift it from the precious pool!

Up it comes all brown and dim,
Telling of the twilight sweet:
As it rises to the brim
See the sun and water meet!

See the friends each other hail!
“Here you are!” cries Master Sun;
Mistress Water from the pail
Flashes back, alive with fun!

Have you not a tale to tell,
Water, as I take you home?
Tell me of the hidden

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