THE LITTLE ROAD

THE LITTLE ROAD

THE LITTLE ROAD

I willnot take the great road that goes so proud and high,Like the march of Roman legions that made it long ago;But I will choose another way, a little road I know.There no poor tramp goes limping, nor rich poor men drive by,Nor ever crowding cattle, or sheep in dusty throngBefore their beating drovers drift cruelly along:But only birds and free things, and ever in my earSound of the leaves and little tongues of water talking near.The great roads march on boldly, with scarce a curve or bend,From some huge smoky Nothing, to Nothing at their end;They march like Cæsar’s legions, and none may them withstand,But whence, or whither going, they do not understand,But oh, the little twisty road,The sweet and lover’s-kiss-ty road,The secret winding misty road,That leads to Fairyland!

I willnot take the great road that goes so proud and high,Like the march of Roman legions that made it long ago;But I will choose another way, a little road I know.There no poor tramp goes limping, nor rich poor men drive by,Nor ever crowding cattle, or sheep in dusty throngBefore their beating drovers drift cruelly along:But only birds and free things, and ever in my earSound of the leaves and little tongues of water talking near.The great roads march on boldly, with scarce a curve or bend,From some huge smoky Nothing, to Nothing at their end;They march like Cæsar’s legions, and none may them withstand,But whence, or whither going, they do not understand,But oh, the little twisty road,The sweet and lover’s-kiss-ty road,The secret winding misty road,That leads to Fairyland!

I willnot take the great road that goes so proud and high,Like the march of Roman legions that made it long ago;But I will choose another way, a little road I know.There no poor tramp goes limping, nor rich poor men drive by,Nor ever crowding cattle, or sheep in dusty throngBefore their beating drovers drift cruelly along:But only birds and free things, and ever in my earSound of the leaves and little tongues of water talking near.

I willnot take the great road that goes so proud and high,

Like the march of Roman legions that made it long ago;

But I will choose another way, a little road I know.

There no poor tramp goes limping, nor rich poor men drive by,

Nor ever crowding cattle, or sheep in dusty throng

Before their beating drovers drift cruelly along:

But only birds and free things, and ever in my ear

Sound of the leaves and little tongues of water talking near.

The great roads march on boldly, with scarce a curve or bend,From some huge smoky Nothing, to Nothing at their end;They march like Cæsar’s legions, and none may them withstand,But whence, or whither going, they do not understand,But oh, the little twisty road,The sweet and lover’s-kiss-ty road,The secret winding misty road,That leads to Fairyland!

The great roads march on boldly, with scarce a curve or bend,

From some huge smoky Nothing, to Nothing at their end;

They march like Cæsar’s legions, and none may them withstand,

But whence, or whither going, they do not understand,

But oh, the little twisty road,

The sweet and lover’s-kiss-ty road,

The secret winding misty road,

That leads to Fairyland!


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