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Poem by Dorothy Una Ratcliffe


Lilies


When I am old, so very old
    That all my own have passed away,
And I await Life's evening-gold,
    A little figure, lone and grey;
        I'll keep a garden, green and bright,
        Then I'll forget approaching night.

A garden dear—with quaint-cut yews—
    Bound by a hedge of bronzing beech,
And just before them I shall choose
    The great white lilies that beseech,
        With upturned faces, pure and staid,
        Love from the little Mother Maid.

And close beside the lichened wall,
    Lilies, aflame like scarlet fire,
Shall watch the little swallows fall
    From out their nestlet in the byre;
        And where the path strays to the stream,
        The golden ones shall dying dream.

Then where the garden greets the wood,
    A host of lily-bells shall ring
Their message clear that "all is good
    Where God reigns over everything."
        My garden-beauty, all shall see,
        Is mirrored from Eternity.

A GARDEN IN AIREDALE

Dorothy Una Ratcliffe


Dorothy Una Ratcliffe's other poems:
  1. The Road
  2. Saadi and the Rose
  3. Song of the Mists
  4. The Moors in Summer
  5. Satan and I


Poems of the other poets with the same name:

  • Menella Smedley Lilies ("A child is lying fast asleep")

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