Chapter 13

MIDGES IN THE SUNSHINE

MIDGES IN THE SUNSHINE

If I could see with a midge’s eyeOr think with a midge’s brain,I wonder what I’d say of the worldWith all its joy and pain.Would my seven brief hours of mortal lifeSeem as long as seventy years,As I danced in the flickering sunshineAmid my tiny peers?Should I feel the slightest hope or careFor the midges yet to be;Or think I died before my timeIf I died at half-past three,Instead of living till set of sunOn the breath of the summer wind;Or dream that the world was made for meAnd all my little kind?Perhaps if I did I’d know as muchOf Nature’s mighty plan,And what it meant for good or ill,As that larger midge, a man!Anonymous.

If I could see with a midge’s eyeOr think with a midge’s brain,I wonder what I’d say of the worldWith all its joy and pain.Would my seven brief hours of mortal lifeSeem as long as seventy years,As I danced in the flickering sunshineAmid my tiny peers?Should I feel the slightest hope or careFor the midges yet to be;Or think I died before my timeIf I died at half-past three,Instead of living till set of sunOn the breath of the summer wind;Or dream that the world was made for meAnd all my little kind?Perhaps if I did I’d know as muchOf Nature’s mighty plan,And what it meant for good or ill,As that larger midge, a man!Anonymous.

If I could see with a midge’s eyeOr think with a midge’s brain,I wonder what I’d say of the worldWith all its joy and pain.Would my seven brief hours of mortal lifeSeem as long as seventy years,As I danced in the flickering sunshineAmid my tiny peers?Should I feel the slightest hope or careFor the midges yet to be;Or think I died before my timeIf I died at half-past three,Instead of living till set of sunOn the breath of the summer wind;Or dream that the world was made for meAnd all my little kind?Perhaps if I did I’d know as muchOf Nature’s mighty plan,And what it meant for good or ill,As that larger midge, a man!Anonymous.

If I could see with a midge’s eye

Or think with a midge’s brain,

I wonder what I’d say of the world

With all its joy and pain.

Would my seven brief hours of mortal life

Seem as long as seventy years,

As I danced in the flickering sunshine

Amid my tiny peers?

Should I feel the slightest hope or care

For the midges yet to be;

Or think I died before my time

If I died at half-past three,

Instead of living till set of sun

On the breath of the summer wind;

Or dream that the world was made for me

And all my little kind?

Perhaps if I did I’d know as much

Of Nature’s mighty plan,

And what it meant for good or ill,

As that larger midge, a man!

Anonymous.


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