Roses

written by


« Reload image

I ENTERED dutiful, God knows,
  The room in which I was to sit
  With dreary unbelieving books.
  It was surprising, I suppose,
  To find such happy change in it:
  There stood a most celestial rose
  And looked the flower that my love looks
  Who, where she turns her smiling face
  Makes heavy earth a hopeful place.


  I blessed the heart that wished me well
  When I had been bereft of much,
  And brought such word of beauty back.
  I went like one escaping hell
  To drink its fragrance and to touch,
  And stroked, O ludicrous to tell!
  A horrid thing of bric-a-brac,
  A make-believe, a mockery,
  And nothing that a rose should be.


  Red real roses keep a thorn,
  And save their loveliness a while
  And in their perfect date unfold.
  But you, beyond all women born,
  Have spent so easily your smile,
  That I am not the less forlorn
  Nor these ironic walls less cold,
  Because it smiles, the chilly rose,
  As you are smiling, I suppose.

© John Crowe Ransom