Between a garden and old tomb Disused, a foot-path threads the clover; And there I met the gardener's boy Bearing some dewy chaplets over. I marvelled, for I just had passed The charnel vault and shunned its gloom: "Stay, whither wend you, laden thus; Roses! you would not these inhume?" "Yea, for against the bridal hour My Master fain would keep their bloom; A charm in the dank o'the vault there is, Yea, we the rose entomb." | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...AUGUST MOONRISE by SARA TEASDALE BEFORE THE RAIN by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH BIANCA AMONG THE NIGHTINGALES by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING THE LISBON PACKET by GEORGE GORDON BYRON HIS CONTENT IN THE COUNTRY by ROBERT HERRICK BROWNING AT ASOLO by ROBERT UNDERWOOD JOHNSON THE BRONCHO THAT WOULD NOT BE BROKEN by NICHOLAS VACHEL LINDSAY |