I think I’ll buy a little field,
Though scant am I of pelf,
And hold the hope that it may yield
A living for myself;
For I have toiled ten thousand days
With ledger and with pen,
And I am sick of city ways
And soured with city men.
So I will plant my little plot
With lettuce, beans and peas;
Potatoes too – oh quite a lot,
An pear and apple trees.
My carrots will be coral pink,
My turnips ivory;
And I’ll forget my pen and ink,
And office slavery.
My hut shall have a single room
Monastically bare;
A faggot fire for the winter gloom,
A table and a chair.
A Frugalist I call myself,
My needs are oh so small;
My luxury a classic shelf
Of poets on the wall.
Here as I dream, how grey and cold
The City seems to me;
Another world of green and gold
Incessantly I see.
So I will fling my pen away,
And learn a how to wield;
A cashbook and a stool today . . .
Soon, soon a Little Field.
(Robert William Service)
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Based on Topics: Man Poems, Sadness Poems, Nature Poems, Dreams Poems, Hope Poems, Literature Poems, Cities Poems, Winter Poems, Poets Poems, Slavery PoemsBased on Keywords: faggot, turnips, peas, carrots, lettuce, ledger, soured, monastically