Hast thou seen reversed the prophet's miracle-- The worm that, touched, a twig-like semblance takes? Or hast thou mused what giveth the craft that makes The twirling spider at once invisible, And the spermal odor to the barberry flower, Or heard the singing sand by the cold coast foam, Or late--in inland autumn groves afar-- Hast thou ever plucked the little chick-wintergreen star And tasted the sour of its leaf? Then come With me betimes, and I will show thee more Than these, of nature's secrecies the least: In the first morning, overcast and chill, And in the day's young sunshine, seeking still For earliest flowers and gathering to the east. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE DESERTED GARDEN by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING COWLEY: THE GARDEN by ALEXANDER POPE THE BLUEBIRD by WILLIAM P. ALEXANDER CHILDREN OF LIGHT by BERNARD BARTON EUTERPE by LUCIUS MORRIS BEEBE OF A WINNOWER OF WHEAT TO THE WINDS by JOACHIM DU BELLAY |