Get Your Premium Membership

Best Famous Wallflowers Poems

Here is a collection of the all-time best famous Wallflowers poems. This is a select list of the best famous Wallflowers poetry. Reading, writing, and enjoying famous Wallflowers poetry (as well as classical and contemporary poems) is a great past time. These top poems are the best examples of wallflowers poems.

Search and read the best famous Wallflowers poems, articles about Wallflowers poems, poetry blogs, or anything else Wallflowers poem related using the PoetrySoup search engine at the top of the page.

See Also:
Written by Henry Lawson | Create an image from this poem

Black Bonnet

 A day of seeming innocence, 
A glorious sun and sky, 
And, just above my picket fence, 
Black Bonnet passing by. 
In knitted gloves and quaint old dress, 
Without a spot or smirch, 
Her worn face lit with peacefulness, 
Old Granny goes to church. 

Her hair is richly white, like milk, 
That long ago was fair -- 
And glossy still the old black silk 
She keeps for "chapel wear"; 
Her bonnet, of a bygone style, 
That long has passed away, 
She must have kept a weary while 
Just as it is to-day. 

The parasol of days gone by -- 
Old days that seemed the best -- 
The hymn and prayer books carried high 
Against her warm, thin breast; 
As she had clasped -- come smiles come tears, 
Come hardship, aye, and worse -- 
On market days, through faded years, 
The slender household purse. 

Although the road is rough and steep, 
She takes it with a will, 
For, since she hushed her first to sleep 
Her way has been uphill. 
Instinctively I bare my head 
(A sinful one, alas!) 
Whene'er I see, by church bells led, 
Brave Old Black Bonnet pass. 

For she has known the cold and heat 
And dangers of the Track: 
Has fought bush-fires to save the wheat 
And little home Out Back. 
By barren creeks the Bushman loves, 
By stockyard, hut, and pen, 
The withered hands in those old gloves 
Have done the work of men. 

..... 

They called it "Service" long ago 
When Granny yet was young, 
And in the chapel, sweet and low, 
As girls her daughters sung. 
And when in church she bends her head 
(But not as others do) 
She sees her loved ones, and her dead 
And hears their voices too. 

Fair as the Saxons in her youth, 
Not forward, and not shy; 
And strong in healthy life and truth 
As after years went by: 
She often laughed with sinners vain, 
Yet passed from faith to sight -- 
God gave her beauty back again 
The more her hair grew white. 

She came out in the Early Days, 
(Green seas, and blue -- and grey) -- 
The village fair, and English ways, 
Seemed worlds and worlds away. 
She fought the haunting loneliness 
Where brooding gum trees stood; 
And won through sickness and distress 
As Englishwomen could. 

..... 

By verdant swath and ivied wall 
The congregation's seen -- 
White nothings where the shadows fall, 
Black blots against the green. 
The dull, suburban people meet 
And buzz in little groups, 
While down the white steps to the street 
A quaint old figure stoops. 

And then along my picket fence 
Where staring wallflowers grow -- 
World-wise Old Age, and Common-sense! -- 
Black Bonnet, nodding slow. 
But not alone; for on each side 
A little dot attends 
In snowy frock and sash of pride, 
And these are Granny's friends. 

To them her mind is clear and bright, 
Her old ideas are new; 
They know her "real talk" is right, 
Her "fairy talk" is true. 
And they converse as grown-ups may, 
When all the news is told; 
The one so wisely young to-day, 
The two so wisely old. 

At home, with dinner waiting there, 
She smooths her hair and face, 
And puts her bonnet by with care 
And dons a cap of lace. 
The table minds its p's and q's 
Lest one perchance be hit 
By some rare dart which is a part 
Of her old-fashioned wit. 

..... 

Her son and son's wife are asleep, 
She puts her apron on -- 
The quiet house is hers to keep, 
With all the youngsters gone. 
There's scarce a sound of dish on dish 
Or cup slipped into cup, 
When left alone, as is her wish, 
Black Bonnet "washes up."


Written by Katharine Tynan | Create an image from this poem

Blessings

 God bless the little orchard brown 
Where the sap stirs these quickening days. 
Soon in a white and rosy gown 
The trees will give great praise. 

God knows I have it in my mind, 
The white house with the golden eaves. 
God knows since it is left behind 
That something grieves and grieves. 

God keep the small house in his care, 
The garden bordered all in box, 
Where primulas and wallflowers are 
And crocuses in flocks. 

God keep the little rooms that ope 
One to another, swathed in green, 
Where honeysuckle lifts her cup 
With jessamine between. 

God bless the quiet old grey head 
That dreams beside the fire of me, 
And makes home there for me indeed 
Over the Irish Sea.
Written by Elinor Wylie | Create an image from this poem

The Lost Path

 The garden's full of scented wallflowers, 
And, save that these stir faintly, nothing stirs; 
Only a distant bell in hollow chime 
Cried out just now for far-forgoten time, 
And three reverberate words the great bell spoke. 
The knocker's made of brass, the door of oak, 
And such a clamor must be loosed on air 
By the knocker's blow that knock I do not dare. 
The silence is a spell, and if it break, 
What things, that now lie sleeping, will awake?

Are simple creatures lying there in cool 
Sweet linen sheets, in slumber like the pool 
Of moonlight white as water on the floor? 
Will they come down laughing and unlock the door? 
And will they draw me in, and let me sit 
On the tall settle while the lamp is lit? 
And shall I see their innocent clean lives 
Shining as plainly as the plates and knives, 
The blue bowls, and the brass cage with its bird?

But listen! listen! surely something stirred 
Within the house, and creeping down the halls 
Draws close to me with sinister footfalls. 
Will long pale fingers softly lift the latch, 
And lead me up, under the osier thatch, 
To a little room, a little secret room, 
Hung with green arras picturing the doom, 
The most disasterous death of some proud knight? 
And shall I search the room by candle-light 
And see, behind the curtains of my bed, 
A murdered man who sleeps as sleep the dead?

Or will my clamorous knocking shake the trees 
With lonely thunder through the stillnesses, 
And then lie down--the coldest fear of all-- 
To nothing, and deliberate silence fall 
On the house deep in the silence, and no one come 
To door or window, staring blind and dumb?

Book: Radiant Verses: A Journey Through Inspiring Poetry