JUST now I think 
I 'd like to be 
At the river's brink 
Beneath a tree, 
And stretched out flat 
On the cooling grass, Just gazing at 
The clouds that pass 
Like toy ships fair 
In a sea of blue; 
But I can't be there, 
I have work to do. 
 
Or I 'd like to be 
In an orchard gay,  
Where every tree 
Is in bloom today;  
Where the pink and white 
Of the blossoms sweet  
Blot out the fright 
Of the city street,  
Where there's nothing to see 
But what is true;  
But that cannot be 
For I've work to do. 
 
Oh, I'd like to steal 
From my little den,  
From the great unreal 
And the haunts of men  
To the joyous truth 
Of the open air,  
To the honest youth 
That I left back there, 
To the boy I was 
In the days of old; 
But I can't because 
I 'in a slave to gold.
Edgar Albert Guest
http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/dreaming-181/