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Poems (Gould, 1833)/The Crocus's Soliloquy

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4693980Poems — The Crocus's SoliloquyHannah Flagg Gould
THE CROCUS'S SOLILOQUY.
Down in my solitude under the snow,Where nothing cheering can reach me;Here, without light to see how to grow,I'll trust to nature to teach me.
I will not despair, nor be idle, nor frown,Locked in so gloomy a dwelling;My leaves shall run up, and my roots shall run downWhile the bud in my bosom is swelling.
Soon as the frost will get out of my bed,From this cold dungeon to free me,I will peer up with my little bright head;All will be joyful to see me.
Then from my heart will young petals diverge,As rays of the sun from their focus.I from the darkness of earth will emergeA happy and beautiful Crocus!
Gaily arrayed in my yellow and green,When to their view I have risen,Will they not wonder how one so sereneCame from so dismal a prison?
Many, perhaps, from so simple a flowerThis little lesson may borrow—Patient to-day, through its gloomiest hour,We come out the brighter to-morrow!