One summer day, along the street, 
 Men pruned the gums 
 To make them neat. 
 The tender branches, white with flowers, 
 Lay in the sun 
 For hours and hours, 
 And every hour they grew more sweet, 
 More honey-like 
 Until the street 
 Smelt like a hive, withouten bees. 
 But still the gardeners 
 Lopped the trees. 
 Then came the children out of school, 
 Noisy and separate 
 As their rule  Of being is. The spangled trees 
 Gave them one heart: 
 Such power to please 
 Had all the flowering branches strown 
 Around for them 
 To make their own. 
 Then such a murmuring arose 
 As made the ears 
 Confirm the nose 
 And give the lie to eyes. For hours 
 Child bees hummed 
 In the honey flowers. 
 They gathered sprigs and armfuls. Some 
 Ran with their fragrant 
 Burdens home, 
 And still returned; and after them 
 Would drag great boughs. 
 Some stripped a stem 
 Of rosy flowers and played with these. 
 Never such love 
 Had earthly trees 
 As these young creatures gave. By night, 
 The treasured sprays 
 Of their delight 
 Were garnered every one. The street 
 Looked, as the council liked it, neat.
Pruning Flowering Gums
written byLesbia Harford
© Lesbia Harford





