Poems of William Blake
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THE FLY    Little Fly,    Thy summer's play    My thoughtless hand    Has brushed away.    Am not I    A fly like thee?    Or art not thou    A man like me?    For I dance    And drink, and sing,    Till some blind hand    Shall brush my wing.    If thought is life    And strength and breath    And the want    Of thought is death;    Then am I    A happy fly,    If I live,    Or if I die.
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INFANT SORROW    My mother groaned, my father wept:    Into the dangerous world I leapt,    Helpless, naked, piping loud,    Like a fiend hid in a cloud.    Struggling in my father's hands,    Striving against my swaddling-bands,    Bound and weary, I thought best    To sulk upon my mother's breast.