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Home  »  An American Anthology, 1787–1900  »  250 After a Lecture on Keats

Edmund Clarence Stedman, ed. (1833–1908). An American Anthology, 1787–1900. 1900.

By Oliver WendellHolmes

250 After a Lecture on Keats

THE WREATH that star-crowned Shelley gave

Is lying on thy Roman grave,

Yet on its turf young April sets

Her store of slender violets;

Though all the Gods their garlands shower,

I too may bring one purple flower.

Alas! what blossom shall I bring,

That opens in my Northern spring?

The garden beds have all run wild,

So trim when I was yet a child;

Flat plantains and unseemly stalks

Have crept across the gravel walks;

The vines are dead, long, long ago,

The almond buds no longer blow.

No more upon its mound I see

The azure, plume-bound fleur-de-lis;

Where once the tulips used to show,

In straggling tufts the pansies grow;

The grass has quenched my white-rayed gem,

The flowering “Star of Bethlehem,”

Though its long blade of glossy green

And pallid stripe may still be seen.

Nature, who trends her nobles down,

And gives their birthright to the clown,

Has sown her base-born weedy things

Above the garden’s queens and kings.

Yet one sweet flower of ancient race

Springs in the old familiar place.

When snows were melting down the vale,

And Earth unlaced her icy mail,

And March his stormy trumpet blew,

And tender green came peeping through,

I loved the earliest one to seek

That broke the soil with emerald beak,

And watch the trembling bells so blue

Spread on the column as it grew.

Meek child of earth! thou wilt not shame

The sweet, dead poet’s holy name;

The God of music gave thee birth,

Called from the crimson-spotted earth,

Where, sobbing his young life away,

His own fair Hyacinthus lay.

The hyacinth my garden gave

Shall lie upon that Roman grave!