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Poetry Archives

A continuing selection of classic and contemporary poems.

Flapper

D. H. Lawrence

Love has crept out of her sealéd heart
  As a field-bee, black and amber,
  Breaks from the winter-cell, to clamber
Up the warm grass where the sunbeams start.

Mischief has come in her dawning eyes,
  And a glint of coloured iris brings
  Such as lies along the folded wings
Of the bee before he flies.

Who, with a ruffling, careful breath,
  Has opened the wings of the wild young sprite?
  Has fluttered her spirit to stumbling flight
In her eyes, as a young bee stumbleth?

Love makes the burden of her voice.
  The hum of his heavy, staggering wings
  Sets quivering with wisdom the common things
That she says, and her words rejoice.
Online text © 1998-2008 Poetry X. All rights reserved.
From New Poems | B. W. Huebsch, 1918
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