| The child alone a poet is: | |
| Spring and Fairyland are his. | |
| Truth and Reason show but dim, | |
| And all’s poetry with him. | |
| Rhyme and music flow in plenty | 5 |
| For the lad of one-and-twenty, | |
| But Spring for him is no more now | |
| Than daisies to a munching cow; | |
| Just a cheery pleasant season, | |
| Daisy buds to live at ease on. | 10 |
| He’s forgotten how he smiled | |
| And shrieked at snowdrops when a child, | |
| Or wept one evening secretly | |
| For April’s glorious misery. | |
| Wisdom made him old and wary | 15 |
| Banishing the Lords of Faery. | |
| Wisdom made a breach and battered | |
| Babylon to bits: she scattered | |
| To the hedges and ditches | |
| All our nursery gnomes and witches. | 20 |
| Lob and Puck, poor frantic elves, | |
| Drag their treasures from the shelves. | |
| Jack the Giant-killer’s gone, | |
| Mother Goose and Oberon, | |
| Bluebeard and King Solomon. | 25 |
| Robin, and Red Riding Hood | |
| Take together to the wood, | |
| And Sir Galahad lies hid | |
| In a cave with Captain Kidd. | |
| None of all the magic hosts, | 30 |
| None remain but a few ghosts | |
| Of timorous heart, to linger on | |
| Weeping for lost Babylon. |