At Utter Loaf

written by


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I.

  An afternoon as ripe with heat
  As might the golden pippin be
  With mellowness if at my feet
  It dropped now from the apple-tree
  My hammock swings in lazily.


  II.

  The boughs about me spread a shade
  That shields me from the sun, but weaves
  With breezy shuttles through the leaves
  Blue rifts of skies, to gleam and fade
  Upon the eyes that only see
  Just of themselves, all drowsily.


  III.

  Above me drifts the fallen skein
  Of some tired spider, looped and blown,
  As fragile as a strand of rain,
  Across the air, and upward thrown
  By breaths of hayfields newly mown--
  So glimmering it is and fine,
  I doubt these drowsy eyes of mine.


  IV.

  Far-off and faint as voices pent
  In mines, and heard from underground,
  Come murmurs as of discontent,
  And clamorings of sullen sound
  The city sends me, as, I guess,
  To vex me, though they do but bless
  Me in my drowsy fastnesses.


  V.

  I have no care.  I only know
  My hammock hides and holds me here
  In lands of shade a prisoner:
  While lazily the breezes blow
  Light leaves of sunshine over me,
  And back and forth and to and fro
  I swing, enwrapped in some hushed glee,
  Smiling at all things drowsily.

© James Whitcomb Riley