An Irish Wild-Flower

by Sarah Morgan Bryan Piatt English

She felt, I think, but as a wild-flower can,   Through her bright fluttering rags, the dark, the cold. Some farthest star, remembering what man   Forgets, had warmed her little head with gold. Above her, hollow-eyed, long blind to tears,   Leaf-cloaked, a skeleton of stone arose…. O castle-shadow of a thousand years,   Where you have fallen—is this the thing that grows?

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