Poetry Explorer- Classic Contemporary Poetry, OLD SAUL, by LIZETTE WOODWORTH REESE



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OLD SAUL, by                 Poet Analysis     Poet's Biography
First Line: I cannot think of any word
Last Line: A wreath made all of thorn.
Subject(s): Hawthorn


I cannot think of any word
To make it plain to you,
How white a thing the hawthorn bush
That delicately blew

Within a crook of Tinges Lane;
Each May Day there it stood;
And lit a flame of loveliness
For the small neighborhood.

So fragile-white a thing it was,
I cannot make it plain;
Or the sweet fumbling of the bees
Like the break in a rain.

Old Saul lived near. And this his life: --
To cobble for his bread;
To mourn a tall son lost at sea;
A daughter worse than dead.

And so, in place of all his lack,
He set the hawthorn tree;
Made it his wealth, his mirth, his god,
His Zion to touch and see.

Born English he. Down Tinges Lane
His lad's years came and went;
He saw behind that blossoming thorn,
A hundred thorns of Kent.

At lovers slipping through the dusk
He shook a lover's head;
Grudged them each flower. It was too white
For any but the dead.

Once on a silver-mooded day
He said to two or three:
"Folks, when I go, pluck yonder bloom
That I may take with me."

But it was winter when he went
The road wind-wrenched and torn;
They laid upon his coffin lid
A wreath made all of thorn.





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