Songs and Sonnets (Coleman)/The Open Gate
THE OPEN GATE.
There was a little garden set apart
Secluded and inviolate in my heart,
A tender place, where there were wont to grow
The sweetest flowers ever heart can know.
And oft at eventide I wandered there
To plan my days or lift my thoughts in prayer.
But by and by there gathered at the gate
A throng that importuned me early, late:
"O, let us in to see your garden fair,
Its fragrance and its pleasantness to share,
"To walk with you amidst the cooling shade
And count your pretty flowers ere they fade."
And so at last—perchance with secret pride—
I drew the bolt and flung the portals wide,
When in there trooped a careless, motley throng,
With curious glances hurrying along.
Some stayed to question and to criticize,
But scarcely heard or heeded my replies;
Some looked about with cold, contemptuous gaze,
And some were loud and voluble in praise.
And so they came and went, but since that hour
There has not bloomed for me one little flower.