THE light passes from ridge to ridge, from flower to flower; -- the hypaticas, wide-spread under the light grow faint -- the petals reach inward, the blue tips bend toward the bluer heart and the flowers are lost. The cornel-buds are still white, but shadows dart from the cornel-roots -- black creeps from root to root, each leaf cuts another leaf on the grass, shadow seeks shadow, then both leaf and leaf-shadow are lost. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A CARELESS HEART by ISAAC ROSENBERG THE OLD SEXTON by PARK BENJAMIN SONNETS FROM THE PORTUGUESE: 43 by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING THE PRISONER OF CHILLON: INTRODUCTORY SONNET by GEORGE GORDON BYRON BITTER-SWEET: CRADLE SONG [OR, BABYHOOD] by JOSIAH GILBERT HOLLAND ABOU BEN ADHEM by JAMES HENRY LEIGH HUNT |