|

The
Little
Land
When at
home
alone I
sit
And am
very
tired of
it,
I have
just to
shut my
eyes
To go
sailing
through
the
skies--
To go
sailing
far away
To the
pleasant
Land of
Play;
To the
fairy
land
afar
Where
the
Little
People
are;
Where
the
clover-tops
are
trees,
And the
rain-pools
are the
seas,
And the
leaves,
like
little
ships,
Sail
about on
tiny
trips;
And
above
the
Daisy
tree
Through
the
grasses,
High
o'erhead
the
Bumble
Bee
Hums and
passes.

In that
forest
to and
fro
I can
wander,
I can
go;
See the
spider
and the
fly,
And the
ants go
marching
by,
Carrying
parcels
with
their
feet
Down the
green
and
grassy
street.
I can in
the
sorrel
sit
Where
the
ladybird
alit.
I can
climb
the
jointed
grass
And on
high
See the
greater
swallows
pass
In the
sky,
And the
round
sun
rolling
by
Heeding
no such
things
as I.
Through
that
forest I
can pass
Till, as
in a
looking-glass,
Humming
fly and
daisy
tree
And my
tiny
self I
see,
Painted
very
clear
and neat
On the
rain-pool
at my
feet.
Should a
leaflet
come to
land
Drifting
near to
where I
stand,
Straight
I'll
board
that
tiny
boat
Round
the
rain-pool
sea to
float.

Little
thoughtful
creatures
sit
On the
grassy
coasts
of it;
Little
things
with
lovely
eyes
See me
sailing
with
surprise.
Some are
clad in
armor
green--
(These
have
sure to
battle
been!)--
Some are
pied
with
ev'ry
hue,
Black
and
crimson,
gold and
blue;
Some
have
wings
and
swift
are
gone;
But
they all
look
kindly
on.
When my
eyes I
once
again
Open,
and see
all
things
plain:
High
bare
walls,
great
bare
floor;
Great
big
knobs on
drawer
and
door;
Great
big
people
perched
on
chairs,
Stitching
tucks
and
mending
tears,
Each a
hill
that I
could
climb,
And
talking
nonsense
all the
time--
O dear
me,
That I
could be
A sailor
on a the
rain-pool
sea,
A
climber
in the
clover
tree,
And just
come
back a
sleepy-head,
Late at
night to
go to
bed.
Robert
Louis
Stevenson

|