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Poem by Bliss Carman


Trees


In the Garden of Eden, planted by God,
There were goodly trees in the springing sod,—

Trees of beauty and height and grace,
To stand in splendor before His face.

Apple and hickory, ash and pear,
Oak and beech and the tulip rare,

The trembling aspen, the noble pine,
The sweeping elm by the river line;

Trees for the birds to build and sing,
And the lilac tree for a joy in spring;

Trees to turn at the frosty call
And carpet the ground for their Lord's footfall;

Trees for fruitage and fire and shade,
Trees for the cunning builder's trade;

Wood for the bow, the spear, and the flail,
The keel and the mast of the daring sail;

He made them of every grain and girth
For the use of man in the Garden of Earth.

Then lest the soul should not lift her eyes
From the gift to the Giver of Paradise,

On the crown of a hill, for all to see,
God planted a scarlet maple tree.



Bliss Carman


Bliss Carman's other poems:
  1. The Tree of Heaven
  2. White Iris
  3. Peony
  4. The Urban Pan
  5. Daffodil's Return


Poems of the other poets with the same name:

  • Madison Cawein Trees ("Trees, so he said and laid him lovingly")
  • Joyce Kilmer Trees ("(For Mrs. Henry Mills Alden)")

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