How sweet the sight of roses In English lanes of June, Where every flower uncloses To meet the kiss of noon. How strange the sight of roses Roses both sweet and wild Seen where a valley closes 'Mid mountain heights up-piled. Upon whose sides remaining Is strewn the purest snow, By its chill power restraining The tide of spring's soft glow. Yet God, who gave the pureness To yon fair mountain snow, Gives also the secureness Whereby these roses blow. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...LETTERS TO DEAD IMAGISTS by CARL SANDBURG SWEENEY AMONG THE NIGHTINGALES by THOMAS STEARNS ELIOT THE VICAR OF WAKEFIELD: SONG by OLIVER GOLDSMITH HIS CAVALIER by ROBERT HERRICK ROCK OF AGES' by EDWARD H. RICE THE LANDLADY'S DAUGHTER by JOHANN LUDWIG UHLAND |