Today you sent me mignonette: As if, perchance, I might forget That winding garden of our play-filled hours Aflame with color, fragrant with bright flowers. I need not even close my eyes to see The box-wood hedge, or the crepe myrtle tree; And though I left it many years ago, Birds hover near the roses still, I know, And little children stoop to look within The lily-cups, so white and pure and thin. I see that dear old garden blooming yet In every spicy spray of mignonette! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...BROTHERHOOD by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON WHEN I AM DEAD by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON ITALIAN PICTURES: THE COSTA SAN GIORGIO by MINA LOY MY LIGHT WITH YOURS by EDGAR LEE MASTERS SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY: ADAM WEIRAUCH by EDGAR LEE MASTERS |