Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Heartsease Country by Algernon Charles Swinburne
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Heartsease Country

    By Algernon Charles Swinburne



    To Isabel Swinburne.

    The far green westward heavens are bland,
    The far green Wiltshire downs are clear
    As these deep meadows hard at hand:
    The sight knows hardly far from near,
    Nor morning joy from evening cheer.
    In cottage garden-plots their bees
    Find many a fervent flower to seize
    And strain and drain the heart away
    From ripe sweet-williams and sweet-peas
    At every turn on every way.
    But gladliest seems one flower to expand
    Its whole sweet heart all round us here;
    ’Tis Heartsease Country, Pansy Land.
    Nor sounds nor savours harsh and drear
    Where engines yell and halt and veer
    Can vex the sense of him who sees
    One flower-plot midway, that for trees
    Has poles, and sheds all grimed or grey
    For bowers like those that take the breeze
    At every turn on every way.
    Content even there they smile and stand,
    Sweet thought’s heart-easing flowers, nor fear,
    With reek and roaring steam though fanned,
    Nor shrink nor perish as they peer.
    The heart’s eye holds not those more dear
    That glow between the lanes and leas
    Where’er the homeliest hand may please
    To bid them blossom as they may
    Where light approves and wind agrees
    At every turn on every way.
    Sister, the word of winds and seas
    Endures not as the word of these
    Your wayside flowers whose breath would say
    How hearts that love may find heart’s ease
    At every turn on every way.



Extra Info:
From "A Midsummer Holiday and Other Poems"


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