Sadness And Joy
I pray you, Sadness, leave me soon,
In sweet invention thou art poor!
Thy sister, Joy can make ten songs
While thou art making four.
One hour with thee is sweet enough;
But when we find the whole day gone
And no created thing is left—
We mourn the evil done.
Thou art too slow to shape thy thoughts
In stone, on canvas, or in song;
But Joy, being full of active heat,
Must do some deed ere long.
Thy sighs are gentle, sweet thy tears;
But if thou canst not help a man
To prove in substance what he feels—
Then givve me Joy, who can.
Therefore sweet Sadness, leave me soon,
Let thy bright sister, Joy, come more;
For she can make ten lovely songs
While thou art making four.
Enjoy the poem with beautiful music.
poem video👇
Who wrote poem "Sadness And Joy"?
William Henry Davies (July 3, 1871 - September 26, 1940)
William Henry Davies was a Welsh poet and writer. Although he spent much of his earlier life as a poor traveller in the UK and US, he later became one of the most popular poets of his time. After his father died when he was 3 and his mother remarried the next year, Davies was raised by his grandparents. He attended school until age 14 and was a delinquent boy. His grandmother then signed him up for 5 year apprenticeship to a local picture frame maker, which he never liked. At age 22, he went to New York and drifted across the US and Canada, train hopping and casually laboring. After he lost his right leg below the knee from 1899 train hopping injury, Davies returned to Wales and settled in London, where he devoted his time to writing poetry. The main themes in his poems are life's hardships, the human condition reflected in nature, and city life.
"Sadness And Joy" explanation
The poem suggests that sadness and joy are
intertwined and that one cannot fully appreciate one without experiencing the
other. The speaker in the poem encourages the reader to embrace both sadness
and joy, as they both play a role in the human experience. The poem also
highlights the idea of the beauty and value of life, even in its most difficult
moments.