Many Voices by E. (Edith) Nesbit
page 36 of 83 (43%)
page 36 of 83 (43%)
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Within her hand the only flower
Man ever plucked from Paradise; So to my half-built house she came. She turned my useful plot of land Into a garden wild and fair, Where stars in garlands hung like flowers: A moonlit, lonely, lovely land. Dim groves and glimmering fountains there Embraced a secret bower of bowers, And in its rose-ringed heart we were Alone in that enchanted land. What was the spell I wove for her, Her mad dear magic to undo? The red rose dies, the white rose dies, The garden spits me forth with her On the old suburban road I knew. My house is gone, and by my side A stranger stands with angry eyes And lips that swear I ruined her. POEM: WINDFLOWERS When I was little and good I walked in the dappled wood |
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