I cannot think of any word To make it plain to you, How white a thing the hawthorn bush That delicately blew Within a crook of Tinges Lane; Each May Day there it stood; And lit a flame of loveliness For the small neighborhood. So fragile-white a thing it was, I cannot make it plain; Or the sweet fumbling of the bees Like the break in a rain. Old Saul lived near. And this his life: -- To cobble for his bread; To mourn a tall son lost at sea; A daughter worse than dead. And so, in place of all his lack, He set the hawthorn tree; Made it his wealth, his mirth, his god, His Zion to touch and see. Born English he. Down Tinges Lane His lad's years came and went; He saw behind that blossoming thorn, A hundred thorns of Kent. At lovers slipping through the dusk He shook a lover's head; Grudged them each flower. It was too white For any but the dead. Once on a silver-mooded day He said to two or three: "Folks, when I go, pluck yonder bloom That I may take with me." But it was winter when he went The road wind-wrenched and torn; They laid upon his coffin lid A wreath made all of thorn. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ROCK OF AGES' by EDWARD H. RICE EXTEMPORE ON BEING SHOWN SHOE BUCKLES WORN BY DAVID GARRICK by ANNA LETITIA BARBAULD THE LAY OF THE OLD WOMAN CLOTHED IN GREY; A LEGEND OF DOVER by RICHARD HARRIS BARHAM LILIES: 14. THE AWAKING by GEORGE BARLOW (1847-1913) BE DRUNK by CHARLES BAUDELAIRE |