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The Witch-Maid, and Other Verses/The Road to Ronda

From Wikisource

THE ROAD TO RONDA


Along the road to Ronda
    Grow rosemary and thyme,
And trails of periwinkle
    Among the brambles climb;
But 'tis the broom the paths along
That lifts the traveller's heart to song.

The broom its royal treasure
    Spills lavish, far and wide,
No stone but has its banner
    Of cloth-of-gold beside,
No weed but bears its nodding plume,
Its careless bravery of bloom.

The purple spears of lavender
    Smell sweet as charity,

And amaryllis blossoms
    By grey-flowered rosemary;
It's worth a year of suffering
To walk the Ronda road in spring.

There grows a gallant army
    Of blossoms great and small
Along the road to Ronda—
    The broom is lord of all.
O fair and fair and wonder-fair,
Spilt like the sunshine everywhere!


Ronda, Spain.