To the Coming Spring – A Poem

A pretty poem about Spring…

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To The Coming Spring
By Margaret MacKenzie

O punctual Spring!
We had forgotten in this winter town
The days of Summer and the long, long eves.
But now you come on airy wing,
With busy fingers spilling baby-leaves
On all the bushes, and a faint green down
On ancient trees, and everywhere
Your warm breath soft with kisses
Stirs the wintry air,
And waking us to unimagined blisses.
Your lightest footprints in the grass
Are marked by painted crocus-flowers
And heavy-headed daffodils,
While little trees blush faintly as you pass.
The morning and the night
You bathe with heavenly showers,
And scatter scentless violets on the rounded hills,
Drop beneath leafless woods pale primrose posies.
With magic key, in the new evening light,
You are unlocking buds that keep the roses;
The purple lilac soon will blow above the wall
And bended boughs in orchards whitely bloom—
We had forgotten in the Winter’s gloom …
Soon we shall hear the cuckoo call!

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Illustrations by Harry Clarke.

 

This article was posted on Friday, April 27th, 2018 at 1:56 pm and is filed under Australia, Canada, Countries & Cultures, England, English, Languages, Poems, Poems about Early Spring, Poems about Spring, Poetry, Poetry about the Seasons, USA. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

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