@3The Catalpa@1 Pink-sprinkled summer twilight And soft brown velvet tones Of a violin. @3The Apple Tree@1 Dance, @3ma petite cherie@1, Isn't it spring? And spring doesn't last always, @3Ma petite cherie.@1 @3Pines@1 The slow measure of the chanted war song . . . The storm cloud, dull throbbing black against the sky . . . The lover constant though unloved. @3Poplars@1 Statuesque cold-eyed women In smooth, caress-inviting green silk @3En promenade.@1 @3The Oak@1 Yes, William Morris, Here is your heart In a tree, Where you would have it. Yes, it still lives; Every oak is a memory of you. @3Willows@1 Coquettes tinkle ukeleles Fatuously, Droopily, The exertion tires them -- poor dears! @3The Ginkgo@1 Heavy Chinese sirup, Lucent, cloying, Drunk on a tiny blue table To the tiny, lotus-scented tinkle Of a temple bell. @3The Blue Spruce@1 Faultlessly carven jade Is no more faultless than you are, Little tree. But I love you, Little tree, In spite of your faultlessness. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...YOUNG SAMMY'S FIRST WILD OATS by GEORGE SANTAYANA SONNETS FROM THE PORTUGUESE: 18 by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING THE COCK AND THE FOX, OR THE TALE OF THE NUN'S PRIEST by GEOFFREY CHAUCER AND WHAT SHALL YOU SAY? by JOSEPH SEAMON COTTER JR. THE AGONY [AGONIE] by GEORGE HERBERT TO GERMANY by CHARLES HAMILTON SORLEY THE LITTLE CROSS by EDITH AGNEW THE LORELEI by GUILLAUME APOLLINAIRE CLIFF DWELLER LYRICS: ANY HOUSEWIFE'S LAMENT by BERTON BRALEY |