O Rose, thou flower of flowers, thou fragrant wonder, Who shall describe thee in thy ruddy prime; Thy perfect fulness in the summer time; When the pale leaves blushingly part asunder And show the warm red heart lies glowing under? Thou shouldst bloom surely in some sunny clime, Untouched by blights and chilly Winter's rime, Where lightnings never flash, nor peals the thunder. And yet in happier spheres they cannot need thee So much as we do with our weight of woe; Perhaps they would not tend, perhaps not heed thee, And thou wouldst lonely and neglected grow; And He who is All-Wise, He hath decreed thee To gladden earth and cheer all hearts below. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...TIME, REAL AND IMAGINARY; AN ALLEGORY by SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE OF THE LAST VERSES IN THE BOOK by EDMUND WALLER TO A COMMON PROSTITUTE by WALT WHITMAN THE END by BYRON HAVERLY BLACKFORD THE DEATH OF A.G.A by EMILY JANE BRONTE |