Page:Dreams and Images.djvu/86

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AN AUTUMN ROSE-TREE

By Michael Earls, S.J.


It seemed too late for roses
  When I walked abroad to-day,
October stood in silence,
  By the hedges all the way:
Yet did I hear a singing,
  And I saw a red rose-tree:—
In fields so gray with autumn
  How could song or roses be?

Oh, it was never maple
  Nor the dogwood's coat afire,
No sage with scarlet banners,
  Nor the poppy's vested choir:
The breeze that may be music
  When the summer lawns are fair
Will have no heart for singing
  In the autumn's mournful air.

As I went up the roadway,
  Under cold and lonely skies,
A song I heard, a rose-tree
  Waved to me in glad surprise:—
A red cloak and a ribbon,
  (Round the braided hair of jet)
And redder cheeks than roses
  Of a little Margaret.

Now God is good in autumn,
  He can name the birds that sing,