The Brook-Song

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Little brook! Little brook!
  You have such a happy look--
Such a very merry manner, as you swerve and
  curve and crook--
  And your ripples, one and one,
  Reach each other's hands and run
  Like laughing little children in the sun!

  Little brook, sing to me:
  Sing about a bumblebee
That tumbled from a lily-bell and grumbled
  mumblingly,
  Because he wet the film
  Of his wings, and had to swim,
  While the water-bugs raced round and
  laughed at him!

  Little brook-sing a song
  Of a leaf that sailed along
Down the golden-braided centre of your current
  swift and strong,
  And a dragon-fly that lit
  On the tilting rim of it,
  And rode away and wasn't scared a bit.

  And sing--how oft in glee
  Came a truant boy like me,
Who loved to lean and listen to your lilting
  melody,
  Till the gurgle and refrain
  Of your music in his brain
  Wrought a happiness as keen to him
  as pain.

  Little brook-laugh and leap!
  Do not let the dreamer weep:
Sing him all the songs of summer till he sink in
  softest sleep;
  And then sing soft and low
  Through his dreams of long ago--
  Sing back to him the rest he used to
  know!

© James Whitcomb Riley