Reconstruct the poem by dragging each line into its correct position. Your goal is to reassemble the original poem as accurately as possible. As you move the lines, you'll see whether your arrangement is correct, helping you explore the poem's flow and meaning. You can also print out the jumbled poem to cut up and reassemble in the classroom. Either way, take your time, enjoy the process, and discover how the poet's words come together to create something truly beautiful.
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To die as gladly as I, to waste
He caught her hands, and her heart he kept.
In the Jester out of the dead leaves leapt;
Grew sick of life, and the life hereafter,
On Earth's brown bosom, and hear no more
A girl came berrying down the hedges β
Lie down as the fallen tree is lying
Into the heart of the autumn forest;
As a bird from the stone that a slinger fledges.
Of sea, and sky, and the seasons four.
Like wine that's spilled from a cup unsteady.
Rang through the forest: before him, after,
Round him and past him in nerveless haste
He lay in the leaves, and a sound of laughter
Here," said the Jester, "the year makes ready
The dead leaves whirled in a helpless eddy.
The madman's laughter, the sage's sighing.
The wind dropped dead at the forest edges
The Jester went when his mood was sorest
Around, above him the laughter swept.
The woman came, and the man that slept
A Jester, a winner of empty laughter,
I will die," he said, "as my mirth is dying,
π Congratulations! π
You've successfully reconstructed the poem! Your understanding of poetry and attention to detail is impressive.
A Jester, a winner of empty laughter, Grew sick of life, and the life hereafter, Of sea, and sky, and the seasons four. "I will die," he said, "as my mirth is dying, Lie down as the fallen tree is lying On Earth's brown bosom, and hear no more The madman's laughter, the sage's sighing."
The Jester went when his mood was sorest Into the heart of the autumn forest; Round him and past him in nerveless haste The dead leaves whirled in a helpless eddy. "Here," said the Jester, "the year makes ready To die as gladly as I, to waste Like wine that's spilled from a cup unsteady."
He lay in the leaves, and a sound of laughter Rang through the forest: before him, after, Around, above him the laughter swept. A girl came berrying down the hedges — The wind dropped dead at the forest edges As a bird from the stone that a slinger fledges. The woman came, and the man that slept In the Jester out of the dead leaves leapt; He caught her hands, and her heart he kept.