THE MOON
Playthings my Betsey hath, the snail’s cast shell,Pebbles and small unripened pears, she dotesOn gentle things with furred or feathered coats,A bunch of keys, a little brazen bell;But none of these enticements please so well,Nor pouring tea nor sailing paper boats,As the rare moon that of an evening floatsIn anchorages inaccessible.On frost-bound nights a portly yellow moonShe kissed her hand to him before she slept,The slim white stripling of an afternoonIn summer, still she longed for him and weptSeeking to coax him down an elder wand,For once, that she might hold him in her hand.
Playthings my Betsey hath, the snail’s cast shell,Pebbles and small unripened pears, she dotesOn gentle things with furred or feathered coats,A bunch of keys, a little brazen bell;But none of these enticements please so well,Nor pouring tea nor sailing paper boats,As the rare moon that of an evening floatsIn anchorages inaccessible.On frost-bound nights a portly yellow moonShe kissed her hand to him before she slept,The slim white stripling of an afternoonIn summer, still she longed for him and weptSeeking to coax him down an elder wand,For once, that she might hold him in her hand.
Playthings my Betsey hath, the snail’s cast shell,Pebbles and small unripened pears, she dotesOn gentle things with furred or feathered coats,A bunch of keys, a little brazen bell;But none of these enticements please so well,Nor pouring tea nor sailing paper boats,As the rare moon that of an evening floatsIn anchorages inaccessible.On frost-bound nights a portly yellow moonShe kissed her hand to him before she slept,The slim white stripling of an afternoonIn summer, still she longed for him and weptSeeking to coax him down an elder wand,For once, that she might hold him in her hand.