James Kenneth Stephen (Джеймс Кеннет Стивен)
My Education
At school I sometimes read a book, And learned a lot of lessons; Some small amount of pains I took, And showed much acquiescence In what my masters said, good men! Yet after all I quite Forgot the most of it: but then I learned to write. At Lincoln's Inn I'd read a brief, Abstract a title, study Great paper-piles, beyond belief Inelegant and muddy: The whole of these as time went by I soon forgot: indeed I tried to: yes: but by and by I learned to read. By help of Latin, Greek and Law I now can write and read too: Then perish each forgotten saw, Each fact I do not need too: But still whichever way I turn At one sad task I stick: I fear that I shall never learn Arithmetic.
James Kenneth Stephen’s other poems:
- The Last Ride Together (after Browning)
- Steam-Launches on the Thames
- After the Golden Wedding (Three Soliloquies)
- The Philosopher and the Philanthropist
- Wordsworth
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