Textarchiv - Alfred Austin
https://www.textarchiv.com/alfred-austin
English Poet, novelist and dramatist. Born on 30 May 1835 in Headingley, Yorkshire, England. Died 2 June 1913 in Ashford, Kent, England.
dePrimroses
https://www.textarchiv.com/alfred-austin/primroses
<div class="field field-name-body field-type-text-with-summary field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item even" property="schema:text content:encoded"><p>Latest, earliest of the year,<br />
Primroses that still were here,<br />
Snugly nestling round the boles<br />
Of the cut-down chestnut poles,<br />
When December's tottering tread<br />
Rustled 'mong the deep leaves dead,<br />
And with confident young faces<br />
Peeped from out the sheltered places<br />
When pale January lay<br />
In its cradle day by day,<br />
Dead or living, hard to say,<br />
Now that mid-March blows and blusters,<br />
Out you steal in tufts and clusters,<br />
Making leafless lane and wood<br />
Vernal with your hardihood.<br />
Other lovely things are rare,<br />
You are prodigal as fair.<br />
First you come by ones and ones,<br />
Lastly in battalions,<br />
Skirmish along hedge and bank,<br />
Turn old Winter's wavering flank,<br />
Round his flying footsteps hover,<br />
Seize on hollow, ridge, and cover,<br />
Leave nor slope nor hill unharried,<br />
Till his snowy trenches carried,<br />
O'er his sepulchre you laugh,<br />
Winter's joyous epitaph.</p>
<p>This, too, be your glory great,<br />
Primroses, you do not wait,<br />
As the other flowers do,<br />
For the spring to smile on you,<br />
But with coming are content,<br />
Asking no encouragement.<br />
Ere the hardy crocus cleaves<br />
Sunny borders 'neath the eaves,<br />
Ere the thrush his song rehearse<br />
Sweeter than all poets' verse,<br />
Ere the early bleating lambs<br />
Cling like shadows to their dams,<br />
Ere the blackthorn breaks to white,<br />
Snowy-hooded anchorite;<br />
Out from every hedge you look,<br />
You are bright by every brook,<br />
Weaving for your sole defence<br />
Fearlessness of innocence.<br />
While the daffodils still waver,<br />
Ere the jonquil gets its savor,<br />
While the linnets yet but pair,<br />
You are fledged, and everywhere.<br />
Nought can daunt you, nought distress,<br />
Neither cold nor sunlessness.<br />
You, when Lent sleet flies apace,<br />
Look the tempest in the face;<br />
As descend the flakes more slow,<br />
From your eyelids shake the snow,<br />
And when all the clouds have flown,<br />
Meet the sun's smile with your own.<br />
Nothing ever makes you less<br />
Gracious to ungraciousness.<br />
March may bluster up and down,<br />
Pettish April sulk and frown;<br />
Closer to their skirts you cling,<br />
Coaxing Winter to be Spring.</p>
<p>Then when your sweet task is done,<br />
And the wild-flowers, one by one,<br />
Here, there, everywhere do blow,<br />
Primroses, you haste to go,<br />
Satisfied with what you bring,<br />
Waning morning-star of spring.<br />
You have brightened doubtful days,<br />
You have sweetened long delays,<br />
Fooling our enchanted reason<br />
To miscalculate the season.<br />
But when doubt and fear are fled,<br />
When the kine leave wintry shed,<br />
And 'mong grasses green and tall<br />
Find their fodder, make their stall;<br />
When the wintering swallow flies<br />
Homeward back from southern skies,<br />
To the dear old cottage thatch<br />
Where it loves to build and hatch,<br />
That its young may understand,<br />
Nor forget, this English land;<br />
When the cuckoo, mocking rover,<br />
Laughs that April loves are over;<br />
When the hawthorn, all ablow,<br />
Mimics the defeated snow;<br />
Then you give one last look round,<br />
Stir the sleepers underground,<br />
Call the campion to awake,<br />
Tell the speedwell courage take,<br />
Bid the eyebright have no fear,<br />
Whisper in the bluebell's ear<br />
Time has come for it to flood<br />
With its blue waves all the wood,<br />
Mind the stitchwort of its pledge<br />
To replace you in the hedge,<br />
Bid the ladysmocks good-bye,<br />
Close your bonnie lids and die;<br />
And, without one look of blame,<br />
Go as gently as you came.</p>
</div></div></div><div class="field field-name-field-author field-type-taxonomy-term-reference field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item even" rel="schema:author"><a href="/alfred-austin" typeof="skos:Concept" property="schema:name" datatype="">Alfred Austin</a></div></div></div><div class="field field-name-field-releasedate field-type-number-integer field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item even" property="schema:datePublished">1882</div></div></div><span rel="schema:url" resource="/alfred-austin/primroses" class="rdf-meta element-hidden"></span><span property="schema:name" content="Primroses" class="rdf-meta element-hidden"></span>Mon, 16 Jan 2017 21:18:20 +0000mrbot5561 at https://www.textarchiv.com