My neighbor lives on the hill,
And I in the valley dwell,
My neighbor must look down on me,
Must I look up?-ah, well,
My neighbor lives on the hill,
And I in the valley dwell.
My neighbor reads, and prays,
And I-I laugh, God wot,
And sing like a bird when the grass is green
In my small garden plot;
But ah, he reads and prays,
And I-I laugh, God wot.
His face is a book of woe,
And mine is a song of glee;
A slave he is to the great “They say,”
But I-I am bold and free;
No wonder he smacks of woe,
And I have the tang of glee.
My neighbor thinks me a fool,
“The same to yourself,” say I;
“Why take your books and take your prayers,
Give me the open sky;”
My neighbor thinks me a fool,
“The same to yourself,” say I.
Differences
Paul Laurence Dunbar
(1)
Poem topics: green, sky, song, bird, grass, bold, great, small, face, garden, book, open, slave, god, laugh, fool, valley, Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
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