C.D. Warner, et al., comp.
The Library of the World’s Best Literature. An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.
Philip Bourke Marston (18501887)
Before and After the Flower-Birth
Sister, lean close to me, that we may kiss.
Here we go rising, rising—but to where?
It is so warm and pleasant here. But hark!
What strangest sound was that above the dark?
Seemed it not so?
And louder still it rings, and seems more near.
Oh! I am shaken through and through with fear—
Now in some deadly grip I seem confined!
Farewell, my sister! Rise, and follow, and find.
Gone where she will not answer when I call!
How lost? how gone? Alas! this sound above me—
“Poor little violet, left with none to love thee!”
And now, it seems, I break against that sound!
What bitter pain is this that binds me round,
This pain I press into! Where have I come?
They call this—Garden, and the time is Spring.
Like you I have felt the pain of flowering:
But oh! the wonder and the deep delight
It was to stand here, in the broad sunlight,
And feel the wind flow round me cool and kind;
To hear the singing of the leaves the wind
Goes hurrying through; to see the mighty trees,
Where every day the blossoming buds increase.
At evening, when the shining sun goes in,
The gentler lights we see, and dews begin,
And all is still beneath the quiet sky,
Save sometimes for the wind’s low lullaby.
Great talk they make about the coming Rose,—
The very fairest flower, they say, that blows,
Such scent she hath; her leaves are red, they say,
And fold her round in some divine, sweet way.
Have pleasure in this wonder of delight!
How all the trees laugh at the wind’s light strain!
And hurts us not; but if we stood up high,
Like trees, then should we soon be blown away.
Why, sometimes in their boughs the stars I see.
But hush! I feel the coming of the dew.
As that which stands and shines just over us.
Of this new frost which did her sister slay,
In which she must herself, too, pass away!
Nay, pretty violet, be not so dismayed:
Sleep only, on your sisters sweet, is laid.
Perchance the wind has gone to bring the Rose.
O sisters! surely now your sleep is done.
I would we had not looked upon the sun.
My leaves are stiff with pain, O cruel night!
And through my root some sharp thing seems to bite.
Ah me! what pain, what coming change is this?[She dies.]