Dorigen 6 The garden
It was the sixth day of the month of May,
A morning fresh and bright and with an air
That would lighten any care.
They walked to a garden that was near
And there they took both food and drink,
And so they stayed the daylight hours,
For May had painted with soft showers
This garden full of trees and flowers.
The gardener’s hands had worked so well
That no place could compare to this
Unless it were in paradise itself.
The scented blooms and colours bright
Were enough to lighten any heart
That ever was born unless some sickness
Or some deep sorrow held it firm and fast,
So full they were of beauty and delight.
Around
this garden was a wall
And
all along grew roses tall
And
fruit trees trailed their arms along the stones
With
pears and apples growing on the sleeves.
The
paths led in and out of shrubberies
Where
young folk lost themselves among the leaves
Perhaps by chance or by design, I think.
Perhaps by chance or by design, I think.
The
flowers of the field were doubled here,
Primrose, cowslip, celandine, all yellow,
And
flowers of the hedgerow, violets,
And
purple clover from the meadow
Where
the sleepy poppies grow.
The
colours always match together
For
no flower clashes with another.
On
one side next to the broad path
Were
mint and thyme and rosemary
And
many herbs of scented leaf
With
names all marked in clear relief
With
characters carved upon the wood
For
those who touched and felt and smelled the herbs,
As
they pressed them in their fingers,
But
saw them not at all.
Around
a fountain were more roses
Pink
and yellow and red,
With
buds that promised more to come
Throughout the long, warm summer days.
The
lifting breeze would blow the spray
On
to the path and make the women laugh
And
run from the shower in the gentle wind.
Lawns
there were all neatly cut
In
shaded lines of green, one dark, one light
As
lawns must look when mown with skill.
The
gardener’s art was everywhere
In
every bush and every flower,
But
the gardener’s hand was never seen.
He
must have come when all folk were away.
For
magic must be natural not forced.
No
sight was there of mattock, spade or hoe.
All
looked as if it grew by chance
As if the flowers, every one,
Had
sprung up with the rain and sun.
Tall
trees there were of oak and ash and beech.
Trees that tell us the short time that we live,
For
trees we plant we never see grow big.
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