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  1. The Full Text of “Nurse's Song (Songs of Experience)”. 1 When voices of children are heard on the green, 2 And whisperings are in the dale, 3 The days of my youth rise fresh in my mind, 4 My face turns green and pale. 5 Then come home, my children, the sun is gone down, 6 And the dews of night arise; 7 Your spring and your day are wasted in ...

  2. The Full Text of “Nurse's Song (Songs of Innocence)”. 1 When the voices of children are heard on the green. 2 And laughing is heard on the hill, 3 My heart is at rest within my breast. 4 And everything else is still. 5 "Then come home my children the sun is gone down. 6 And the dews of night arise.

    • Stanza One
    • Stanza Two
    • Stanza Three
    • Stanza Four

    This first stanza wastes no time in bringing the focus directly to the children and their happiness by diving right into the sounds of their “voices”as they enjoy the day. The scene is officially set as taking place on a hill, which in itself could be conceived as another means of showing the heightened levels of joy the children experience. Rather...

    The perspective of ‘Nurse’s Song remains on the nurse for this second stanza as he or she beckons for the children to “leave off play”for the sake of going home. Night has come, and as can be expected from a rational adult, the nurse knows the practical thing to do is to end the games the children had relished in during the daytime. The language wi...

    The perspective in this stanza shifts to the children as they reply to the nurse with their arguments as to why their play should be allowed to continue. In contrast to the nurse’s earlier declaration that “The dews of night arise,”the children are arguing that night is still coming. This differentiation of argument could be a number of things. Per...

    Once more, the nurse is the speaker, and he or she submits to the children’s whims to allow them to play longer. Within this stanza, we find evidence that the children were not, in fact, lying about it still being day because they’re now instructed to “play till the light fades away.”With that in mind, either the nurse has succumbed to their untrut...

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    • Poetry Analyst
  3. Summary. The scene of the poem features a group of children playing outside in the hills, while their nurse listens to them in contentment. As twilight begins to fall, she gently urges them to “leave off play” and retire to the house for the night. They ask to play on till bedtime, for as long as the light lasts.

  4. In this poem the Nurse, a mirror image of the gentle, kind Nurse in Songs of Innocence, has a harsher view of play and sees the freedom that the children enjoy as wasteful. There is a sense of ...

  5. Jul 31, 2024 · Themes: Innocence, pastoral beauty, the harmony of nature and childhood. Structure: Four quatrains with a simple AABB rhyme scheme. Narrative: The nurse calls the children home as evening approaches, but they plead to stay out longer. The nurse lovingly agrees, showing a nurturing and understanding relationship.

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  7. Lines 5 and 6 quote directly from theSongs of Innocence version of "Nurse's Song." The nurse tells the children that it's time to go home as it will soon be night. Given that she just described herself turning "green and pale," however, the lines ring out differently in this version of the poem. It seems as though the nurse can't stand the children

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