To A Butterfly
William Wordsworth
I’ve watched you now a full half hour Self-poised upon that yellow flower; And, little Butterfly! indeed I know not if you sleep or feed. How motionless!—not frozen seas More motionless!—and then What joy awaits you, when the breeze Hath found you out among the trees, And calls you forth again! This plot of orchard-ground is ours; My trees they are, my Sister’s flowers: Here rest your wings when they are weary, Here lodge as in a sanctuary! Come often to us, fear no wrong; Sit near us on the bough! We’ll talk of sunshine and of song, And summer days, when we were young; Sweet childish days, that were as long As twenty days are now.
Next 10 Poems
- William Wordsworth : To A Butterfly ( First Poem )
- William Wordsworth : To A Butterfly ( Second Poem )
- William Wordsworth : To A Highland Girl
- William Wordsworth : To A Sexton
- William Wordsworth : To A Skylark
- William Wordsworth : To Joanna
- William Wordsworth : To M.h.
- William Wordsworth : To May
- William Wordsworth : To My Sister
- William Wordsworth : To The Cuckoo
Previous 10 Poems
- William Wordsworth : Tis Said, That Some Have Died For Love
- William Wordsworth : Three Years She Grew In Sun And Shower,
- William Wordsworth : Three Years She Grew
- William Wordsworth : Thorn, The
- William Wordsworth : There Was A Boy
- William Wordsworth : There Is An Eminence,--of These Our Hills
- William Wordsworth : The World Is Too Much With Us
- William Wordsworth : The World Is To Much With Us; Late And Soon
- William Wordsworth : The Virgin
- William Wordsworth : The Trosachs