| Poems by Women |
Yellow Clover
Must I, who walk alone,
Come on it still,
This Puck of plants
The
wise would do away with,
The sunshine slants
To play with,
Our wee,
gold-dusty flower, the yellow clover,
Which once in parting for a
time
That then seemed long,
Ere time for you was over,
We sealed our
own?
Do you remember yet,
O Soul beyond the stars,
Beyond the
uttermost dim bars
Of space,
Dear Soul who found the earth
sweet,
Remember by love's grace,
In dreamy hushes of heavenly song,
How
suddenly we halted in our climb,
Lingering, reluctant, up that farthest
hill,
Stooped for the blossoms closest to our feet,
And gave them as a
token
Each to each,
In lieu of speech,
In lieu of words too grievous to
be spoken,
Those little, gypsy, wondering blossoms wet
With a strange dew
of tears?
So it began,
This vagabond, unvalued yellow clover,
To be our
tenderest language. All the years
It lent a new zest to the summer
hours,
As each of us went scheming to surprise
The other with our homely,
laureate flowers,
Sonnets and odes,
Fringing our daily roads.
Can
amaranth and asphodel
Bring merrier laughter to your eyes?
Oh, if the
Blest, in their serene abodes,
Keep any wistful consciousness of
earth,
Not grandeurs, but the childish ways of love,
Simplicities of
mirth,
Must follow them above
With touches of vague homesickness that
pass
Like shadows of swift birds across the grass.
How oft, beneath some
foreign arch of sky,
The rover,
You or I,
For life oft sundered look
from look,
And voice from voice, the transient dearth
Schooling my soul to
brook
This distance that no messages may span,
Would chance
Upon our
wilding by a lonely well,
Or drowsy watermill,
Or swaying to the chime of
convent bell,
Or where the nightingales of old romance
With tragical
contraltos fill
Dim solitudes of infinite desire;
And once I joyed to
meet
Our peasant gadabout
A trespasser on trim, seigniorial
seat,
Twinkling a sauce eye
As potentates paced by.
Our golden cord! our soft, pursuing flame
From friendship's altar
fire!
How proudly we would pluck and tame
The dimpling clusters,
mutinously gay!
How swiftly they were sent
Far, far away
On journeys
wide
By sea and continent,
Green miles and blue leagues over,
From each
of us to each,
That so our hearts might reach
And touch within the yellow
clover,
Love's letter to be glad about
Like sunshine when it came!
My sorrow asks no healing; it is love;
Let love then make me brave
To
bear the keen hurts of
This careless summertide,
Ay, of our own poor
flower,
Changed with our fatal hour,
For all its sunshine vanished when
you died.
Only white cover blossoms on your grave.
This poet:
[Author index]
This collection assembled by Jone Johnson Lewis.
Collection © 1999-2002 Jone Johnson Lewis.
Citing poems from these pages:
| Author. "Poem Title." Women's History: Poems by Women. Jone Johnson Lewis, editor. URL: (date of logon) |

