| Poems by Women |
DANDELION
Annie Rankin Annan [1848-1925]
At dawn, when England's childish tongue
Lisped happy
truths, and men were young,
Her Chaucer, with a gay content
Hummed through
the shining fields, scarce bent
By poet's foot, and, plucking, set,
All
lusty, sunny, dewy-wet,
A dandelion in his verse,
Like the first gold in
childhood's purse.
At noon, when harvest colors die
On the pale azure of the sky,
And
dreams through dozing grasses creep
Of winds that are themselves
asleep,
Rapt Shelley found the airy ghost
Of that bright flower the spring
loves most,
And ere one silvery ray was blown
From its full disk made it
his own.
Now from the stubble poets glean
Scant flowers of thought; the Muse would
wean
Her myriad nurslings, feeding them
On petals plucked from a dry
stem.
For one small plumule still adrift,
The wind-blown dandelion's
gift,
The fields once blossomy we scour
Where the old poets plucked the
flower.
From: Stevenson, Burton Egbert.
The Home Book of Verse.
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) |

