A Holiday

by Lizette Woodworth Reese

Along the pastoral ways I go, To get the healing of the trees, The ghostly news the hedges know; To hive me honey like the bees, Against the time of snow. The common hawthorn that I see, Beside the sunken wall astir, Or any other blossoming tree, Is each God’s fair white gospeller, His book upon the knee. A gust-broken bough; a pilfered nest; Rumors of orchard or of bin; The thrifty things of east and west,— The countryside becomes my Inn, And I its happy guest.

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