Public Domain Poetry And Stories - From Wear To Thames by John Frederick Freeman
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From Wear To Thames

    By John Frederick Freeman



    Is it because Spring now is come
    That my heart leaps in its bed of dust?
    Is it with sorrow or strange pleasure
    To watch the green time's gathering treasure?

    Or is there some too sharp distaste
    In all this quivering green and gold?
    Something that makes bare boughs yet barer,
    And the eye's pure delight the rarer?

    Not that the new found Spring is sour....
    The blossom swings on the cherry branch,
    From Wear to Thames I have seen this greenness
    Cover the six-months-winter meanness.

    And windflowers and yellow gillyflowers
    Pierce the astonished earth with light:
    And most-loved wallflower's bloody petal
    Shakes over that long frosty battle.

    But this leaping, sinking heart
    Finds question in grass, bud and blossom--
    Too deeply into the earth is prying,
    Too sharply hears old voices crying.

    There is in blossom, bud and grass
    Something that's neither sorrow nor joy,
    Something that sighs like autumn sighing,
    And in each living thing is dying.

    It is myself that whispers and stares
    Down from the hill and in the wood,
    And in the untended orchard's shining
    Sees the light through thin leaves declining.

    Let me forget what I have been
    What I can never be again.
    Let me forget my winter's meanness
    In this fond, flushing world of greenness.

    Let me forget the world that is
    The changing image of my thought,
    Nor see in thicket and hedge and meadow
    Myself, a grave perplexèd shadow;

    And O, forget that gloomy shade
    That breathes his cloud 'twixt earth and light ...
    All, all forget but sun and blossom,
    And the bird that bears heaven in his bosom.



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