MY EDUCATION - Edmund Spenser Poems

 
 

Poems » edmund spenser » my education

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