The Poetry Corner

Differences

By Paul Laurence Dunbar

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.