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Garden Days
I Night and Day When
the golden day is done, As
the blinding shadows fall Garden darkened, daisy shut, In
the darkness houses shine, Till
at last the day begins In
the darkness shapes of things, These shall wake the yawning maid; There my garden grows again Just
as it was shut away, Every path and every plot, "Up!" they cry, "the day is come |
II Nest Eggs Birds all the summer day Here
in the fork While we stand watching her Soon
the frail eggs they shall Younger than we are, We,
so much older, They
shall go flying In
spite of our wisdom |
III The Flowers All
the names I know from nurse: Fairy places, fairy things, Tiny
woods below whose boughs Fair
are grown-up people's trees, |
IV Summer Sun Great is the sun, and wide he goes Though closer still the blinds we pull The
dusty attic spider-clad Meantime his golden face around Above the hills, along the blue, |
V The Dumb Soldier When
the grass was closely mown, Spring and daisies came apace; Under grass alone he lies, When
the grass is ripe like grain, I
shall find him, never fear, He
has lived, a little thing, He
has seen the starry hours Not
a word will he disclose, |
VI Autumn Fires In
the other gardens Pleasant summer over Sing
a song of seasons! |
VII The Gardener The
gardener does not love to talk. Away
behind the currant row, He
digs the flowers, green, red, and blue, Silly gardener! summer goes, Well
now, and while the summer stays, |
VIII Historical Associations Dear
Uncle Jim. this garden ground Here
we had best on tip-toe tread, Here
is the sea, here is the sand, But
yonder, see! apart and high, |
ENVOYS I To Willie and Henrietta If
two may read aright You
in a garden green Now
in the elders' seat "Time was," the golden head |
II To My Mother You
too, my mother, read my rhymes |
III To Auntie "Chief of our aunts" – not only I, |
IV To Minnie The
red room with the giant bed Ah,
far enough, my dear, To
you in distant India, these |
V To My Name-child 1 Some
day soon this rhyming volume, if you learn with proper speed, In
the great and busy city where the East and West are met, Ay,
and when you slept, a baby, over all the English lands Now
that you have spelt your lesson, lay it down and go and play, And
remember in your playing, as the sea-fog rolls to you, |
VI To Any Reader As
from the house your mother sees |
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