Conversation by a bougainvillea
Conversation by a bougainvillea
‘Oh
yes. I admit it. You are right.’
‘You
don’t have a leg to stand on, amigo mío.’
‘Yes,
I know. I know.
This
bougainvillea is afire with purple,
The
colour of the Mediterranean,
As
the old gardener said.
The
bushes flame with colour,
Bright
and strong.
And
it is fine, all very fine.
The
hibiscus blows its trumpets,
Huge
and red,
Till
they fall as night falls.
The
sky is cloudless,
Blue,
all blue, all day.
But
what would I give
For
a timid violet,
For
one, just one,
“By
a mossy stone,
Half
hidden from the eye.”
Or
the unobtrusive beauty
Of
the yellow primrose in the hedgerow
As
if bouquets were planted there.
Or
the brave cowslip,
Small
and fragile in the wind,
That
blows on the meadows in Somerset,
In
April when the fresh showers come
To
the distant call of the cuckoo.
‘Well,
if you bring an English spring
Into
the question,
That
is hitting below the belt.’
‘If
I bring in an English spring,
There
is no contest.
Admit
it now!’
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