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Sunday, May 5, 2013

When the Ash-Tree Buds and the Maples /
Duncan Cambell Scott


When the Ash-Tree Buds and the Maples

When the ash-tree buds and the maples,
And the osier wands are red,
And the fairy sunlight dapples
Dales where the leaves are spread,
The pools are full of spring water,
Winter is dead.

When the bloodroot blows in the tangle,
And the lithe brooks run,
And the violets gleam and spangle
The glades in the golden sun,
The showers are bright as the sunlight,
April has won.

When the color is free in the grasses,
And the martins whip the mere,
And the Maryland-yellow-throat passes,
With his whistle quick and clear,
The willow is full of catkins;
May is here.

Then cut a reed by the river,
Make a song beneath the lime,
And blow with your lips a-quiver,
While your sweetheart carols the rhyme;
The glamour of love, the lyric of life,
The springtime - the springtime.

~~
Duncan Campbell Scott
from Labour and the Angel, 1898

[Poem is in the public domain in Canada and the United States]

Duncan Campbell Scott biography

1 comment:

  1. Since the beginning of this blog I've been publishing seasonal verse; but I find myself increasingly noticing and wanting to celebrate these changes.

    Last week the buds came out in Toronto, so I wanted to post a poem about budding. That it's by a Canadian master like Scott is a bonus.

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