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Poem by Annie Adams Fields


The Return


The bright sea washed beneath her feet,
  As it had done of yore,
The well-remembered odor sweet
  Came through her opening door.

Again the grass his ripened head        
  Bowed where her raiment swept;
Again the fog-bell told of dread,
  And all the landscape wept.

Again beside the woodland bars
  She found the wilding rose,        
With petals fine and heart of stars,—
  The flower our childhood knows.

And there, before that blossom small,
  By its young face beguiled,
The woman saw her burden fall,        
  And stood a little child.

She knew no more the weight of love,
  No more the weight of grief;
So could the simple wild-rose move
  And bring her heart relief.        

She asked not where her love was gone,
  Nor where her grief was fled,
But stood as at the great white throne,
  Unmindful of things dead.



Annie Adams Fields


Annie Adams Fields's other poems:
  1. Midnight
  2. Comatas
  3. Permanence


Poems of the other poets with the same name:

  • Thomas Traherne The Return ("To Infancy, O Lord, again I com")
  • Edith Nesbit The Return ("THE grass was gray with the moonlit dew")
  • Robert Service The Return ("They turned him loose; he bowed his head")
  • Emily Dickinson The Return ("THOUGH I get home how late, how late!")

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