LIKE the ears of wheat in a wheat-field growing, So a thousand thoughts spring and tremble In the minds of men. But the tender fancies of love Are like the happy colors that leap among them; Red and blue flowers. Red and blue flowers! The sullen reaper destroys you as worthless; Block-headed fools will scornfully thresh you; Even the penniless wayfarer Who is charmed and cheered by your faces. Shakes his poor head, And calls you pretty weeds! But the young girl from the village, Twining her garland, Honors and gathers you. And with you she brightens her lovely tresses. And thus adorned, she hurries to the dancing, Where fiddles and flutes are sweetly sounding; Or runs to the sheltering beech-tree, Where the voice of her lover sounds even sweeter Than fiddles and flutes. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...BEPPO: A VENETIAN STORY by GEORGE GORDON BYRON THE IMPERCIPIENT (AT A CATHEDRAL SERVICE) by THOMAS HARDY A SHROPSHIRE LAD: 50 by ALFRED EDWARD HOUSMAN AFTERNOON ON A HILL by EDNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY THE HOUSE OF LIFE: THE SONNET (INTRODUCTION) by DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI THE WALKER OF THE SNOW by CHARLES DAWSON SHANLY ASTROPHEL AND STELLA: 109 by PHILIP SIDNEY |