04:33

Poem: The Contrast

by Hilary Lafone

Rated
3.3
Type
talks
Activity
Meditation
Suitable for
Everyone
Plays
50

Do you prefer city life or life in nature? Allow this poem, The Contrast by Captain C. Morris, to help you reflect on your time in each space. Feel the emotions that bubble up to the surface as you breathe and settle in. Enjoy this poem to help you relax and find peace.

PoetryContrastUrbanRural LifeWeatherNatureRomanceReflectionEmotionsBreathingRelaxationPeaceLife ContrastsEnvironmental Impact On MoodRomanticismCity Life PreferenceMoodsNature ObservationsLifestyle

Transcript

The Contrast by Captain C.

Morris In London,

I never know what I'd be at,

Enraptured with this and enchanted with that.

I'm wild with the sweets of Variety's plan,

And life seems a blessing too happy for man.

But the country,

Lord help me,

Sets all matters right,

So calm and composing from morning to night.

Oh,

It settles the spirits when nothing is seen,

But an ass on a common,

A goose on a green.

In town,

If it rain,

Why,

It damps not our hope,

The eye has her choice and the fancy her scope.

What harm,

Though it pour whole nights or whole days,

It spoils not our prospects or stops not our ways.

In the country,

What bliss,

When it rains in the fields,

To live on the transports that shuttlecock yields,

Or go crawling from window to window to see A pig on a dunghill or crow in a tree.

In town,

We've no use for the skies overhead,

For when the sun rises,

Then we go to bed.

And as to that old-fashioned virgin the moon,

She shines out of season like satin in June.

In the country,

These planets delightfully glare,

Just to show us the object we want isn't there.

Oh,

How cheering and gay when their beauties arise,

To sit and gaze round with the tears in one's eyes.

But tis in the country,

Alone we can find That happy resource,

The relief of the mind.

When,

Drove to despair,

Our last efforts we make,

And drag the old fish-pond for novelty's sake.

Indeed,

I must own,

Tis a pleasure complete,

To see ladies well-draggled and wet in their feet.

But what is all that to the transport we feel,

When we capture and triumph two toads and a neill?

I have heard,

Though,

That love in a cottage is sweet,

When two hearts in one link of soft sympathy meet.

That's to come,

For as yet I,

Alas,

Am a swain,

Who require I own it more links to my chain.

In the country,

If Cupid should find a man out,

The poor tortured victim mopes hopelessly about.

But in London,

Thank heaven,

Our peace is secure,

Where for one eye to kill,

There's a thousand to cure.

In town let me live,

Then,

In town let me die,

For in truth I can't relish the country,

Not I,

If one must have a villa in summer to dwell.

Oh,

Give me the sweet shady side of Palmal.

Meet your Teacher

Hilary LafoneBroomfield, CO, USA

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© 2026 Hilary Lafone. All rights reserved. All copyright in this work remains with the original creator. No part of this material may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the prior written permission of the copyright owner.

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