Poem - "Vocation" by Rabindranath Tagore

"Vocation" 
by Rabindranath Tagore


When the gong sounds ten in the morning and I walk to school by our

lane.

Every day I meet the hawker crying, "Bangles, crystal

bangles!"

There is nothing to hurry him on, there is no road he must

take, no place he must go to, no time when he must come home.

I wish I were a hawker, spending my day in the road, crying,

"Bangles, crystal bangles!"

When at four in the afternoon I come back from the school,

I can see through the gate of that house the gardener digging

the ground.

He does what he likes with his spade, he soils his clothes

with dust, nobody takes him to task if he gets baked in the sun or

gets wet.

I wish I were a gardener digging away at the garden with

nobody to stop me from digging.

Just as it gets dark in the evening and my mother sends me to

bed,

I can see through my open window the watchman walking up and

down.

The lane is dark and lonely, and the street-lamp stands like

a giant with one red eye in its head.

The watchman swings his lantern and walks with his shadow at

his side, and never once goes to bed in his life.

I wish I were a watchman walking the streets all night,

chasing the shadows with my lantern.