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The Flowers

William Brighty Rands

When Love arose in heart and deed
  To wake the world to greater joy,
‘What can she give me now?’ said Greed,
  Who thought to win some costly toy.

He rose, he ran, he stoop’d, he clutch’d;
  And soon the Flowers, that Love let fall,
In Greed’s hot grasp were fray’d and smutch’d,
  And Greed said, ‘Flowers! Can this be all?’

He flung them down and went his way,
  He cared no jot for thyme or rose;
But boys and girls came out to play,
  And some took these and some took those—

Red, blue, and white, and green and gold;
  And at their touch the dew return’d,
And all the bloom a thousandfold—
  So red, so ripe, the roses burn’d!
Online text © 1998-2008 Poetry X. All rights reserved.
From The Oxford Book of English Verse: 1250-1900 | Clarendon, 1919
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