Foreword to “Weeds By The Wall”

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_In the first rare spring of song,
  In my heart's young hours,
  In my youth 't was thus I sang,
  Choosing 'mid the flowers:--_

  _"Fair the Dandelion is,
  But for me too lowly;
  And the winsome Violet
  Is, forsooth, too holy.
  'But the Touchmenot?' Go to!
  What! a face that's speckled
  Like a common milking-maid's,
  Whom the sun hath freckled.
  Then the Wild-Rose is a flirt;
  And the trillium Lily,
  In her spotless gown, 's a prude,
  Sanctified and silly.
  By her cap the Columbine,
  To my mind, 's too merry;
  Gossips, I would sooner wed
  Some plebeian Berry.
  And the shy Anemone--
  Well, her face shows sorrow;
  Pale, goodsooth! alive to-day,
  Dead and gone to-morrow.
  Then that bold-eyed, buxom wench,
  Big and blond and lazy,--
  She's been chosen overmuch!--
  Sirs, I mean the Daisy.
  Pleasant persons are they all,
  And their virtues many;
  Faith I know but good of each,
  And naught ill of any.
  But I choose a May-apple;
  She shall be my Lady;
  Blooming, hidden and refined,
  Sweet in places shady."_

  _In my youth 'twas thus I sang,
  In my heart's young hours,
  In the first rare spring of song,
  Choosing 'mid the flowers.
  So I hesitated when
  Time alone was reckoned
  By the hours that Fancy smiled,
  Love and Beauty beckoned.
  Hard it was for me to choose
  From the flowers that flattered;
  And the blossom that I chose
  Soon lay dead and scattered.
  Hard I found it then, ah, me!
  Hard I found the choosing;
  Harder, harder since I've found,
  Ah, too hard the losing.
  Haply had I chosen then
  From the weeds that tangle
  Wayside, woodland and the wall
  Of my garden's angle,
  I had chosen better, yea,
  For these later hours--
  Longer last the weeds, and oft
  Sweeter are than flowers._

© Madison Julius Cawein