The Flowers To our private taste, there is always something a little exotic, almost artificial, in songs which, under an English aspect and dress, are yet so manifestly the product of other skies. They affect us like translations; the very fauna and flora are alien, remote; the dog's-tooth violet is but an ill substitute for the rathe primrose, nor can we ever believe that the wood-robin sings as sweetly in April as the English thrush. -- THE ATHEN]AEUM. Buy my English posies! Kent and Surrey may -- Violets of the Undercliff Wet with Channel spray; Cowslips from a Devon combe -- Midland furze afire -- Buy my English posies And I'll sell your heart's desire! Buy my English posies! You that scorn the May, Won't you greet a friend from home Half the world away? Green against the draggled drift, Faint and frail but first -- Buy my Northern blood-root And I'll know where you were nursed: Robin down the logging-road whistles, "Come to me!" Spring has found the maple-grove, the sap is running free. All the winds of Canada call the ploughing-rain. Take the flower and turn the hour, and kiss your love again! Buy my English posies! Here's to match your need -- Buy a tuft of royal heath, Buy a bunch of weed White as sand of Muizenberg Spun before the gale -- Buy my heath and lilies And I'll tell you whence you hail! Under hot Constantia broad the vineyards lie -- Throned and thorned the aching berg props the speckless sky -- Slow below the Wynberg firs trails the tilted wain -- Take the flower and turn the hour, and kiss your love again! Buy my English posies! You that will not turn -- Buy my hot-wood clematis, Buy a frond o' fern Gathered where the Erskine leaps Down the road to Lorne -- Buy my Christmas creeper And I'll say where you were born! West away from Melbourne dust holidays begin -- They that mock at Paradise woo at Cora Lynn -- Through the great South Otway gums sings the great South Main -- Take the flower and turn the hour, and kiss your love again! Buy my English posies! Here's your choice unsold! Buy a blood-red myrtle-bloom, Buy the kowhai's gold Flung for gift on Taupo's face, Sign that spring is come -- Buy my clinging myrtle And I'll give you back your home! Broom behind the windy town, pollen of the pine -- Bell-bird in the leafy deep where the ratas twine -- Fern above the saddle-bow, flax upon the plain -- Take the flower and turn the hour, and kiss your love again! Buy my English posies! Ye that have your own Buy them for a brother's sake Overseas, alone! Weed ye trample underfoot Floods his heart abrim -- Bird ye never heeded, Oh, she calls his dead to him! Far and far our homes are set round the Seven Seas; Woe for us if we forget, we who hold by these! Unto each his mother-beach, bloom and bird and land -- Masters of the Seven Seas, oh, love and understand. |
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