The path to your heart is a New England roadway Under autumn skies, Sudden with loop and twist and turning, Sharp with surprise. At the edges asters smile, and gentians lift Their delicate faces, And the birches murmur their leafy secrets Above the fern's laces. But the way grows rough, and the wind blows shriller, And colder than death. There are cruel hills which stifle the courage And steal the breath. The path to your heart is a New England roadway That I tread alone. It begins with the whisper of friendly birches And ends with a stone. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE CRY OF THE HUMAN by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING HE'D BE NOTHING BUT HIS VIOLIN by MARY KYLE DALLAS THE BROOKLYN BRIDGE [MAY 24, 1883] by EDNA DEAN PROCTOR TWENTY BLOCKS by EGMONT HEGEL ARENS THE BEAU AND THE BEDLAMITE by JOHN BYROM THE CANTERBURY TALES: THE PROLOGUE OF THE MONK'S TALE by GEOFFREY CHAUCER STANZAS, ON PLANTING A BAY-TREE AT THE GRAVE OF CHURCHILL by JOHN CHALK CLARIS |