English Poetry II: From Collins to Fitzgerald. The Harvard Classics. 190914. |
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| 354. Reeds of Innocence |
| | | William Blake (17571827) |
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| PIPING down the valleys wild, | |
| Piping songs of pleasant glee, | |
| On a cloud I saw a child, | |
| And he laughing said to me: | |
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| Pipe a song about a Lamb! | 5 |
| So I piped with merry cheer. | |
| Piper, pipe that song again; | |
| So I piped: he wept to hear. | |
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| Drop thy pipe, thy happy pipe; | |
| Sing thy songs of happy cheer! | 10 |
| So I sung the same again, | |
| While he wept with joy to hear. | |
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| Piper, sit thee down and write | |
| In a book that all may read. | |
| So he vanishd from my sight; | 15 |
| And I pluckd a hollow reed, | |
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| And I made a rural pen, | |
| And I staind the water clear, | |
| And I wrote my happy songs | |
| Every child may joy to hear. | 20 |
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