Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THE PASQUE FLOWER, by MARY BOYNTON COWDREY First Line: I come, mother earth, when the air is chill Last Line: A flower of the early flowering season. Subject(s): American Pasque (flower) | ||||||||
I come, Mother Earth, when the air is chill, The snow blanket still covers you, Even as the down protects my head today; But the fertile soil is kind, And there is an ever-running little brook. An old man of the Dakotah nation finds me; He sits beside me in your lap, Mother Earth, He fills his pipe with sweet tobacco, He lights it with the mystery of fire, He breathes into it the breath of life; Gently he smokes so that thin rings Ascend languidly into the crystal air. He turns his pipe toward the pulsing earth, He turns it toward the azure sky, He turns it toward himself. Unseen powers will guide him even as I am sent To guide the flowers which are to come; Thus am I rewarded for faith, for courage, for love, Thus are the gifts of the gods united in me -- A flower of the early flowering season. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...RHYTHM by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON THE REMEDY WORSE THAN THE DISEASE by MATTHEW PRIOR BALLAD OF THE WOMEN OF PARIS by FRANCOIS VILLON VANITAS VANITATUM, FR. THE DEVIL'S CASE LAW by JOHN WEBSTER AN AUTUMN NIGHT by JOHANNA AMBROSIUS CASTLES IN THE AIR by JAMES BALLANTYNE |
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