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    • My Sunset Garden. Poet: Althea Randolph. The rainbow hues at eventide. Are flowers in the sky. Which bud and blossom one by one. Up in my Garden high. The Violet lifts her modest head.
    • A Beauty To Behold. Poet: Catherine Pulsifer. Gardens, a beauty to behold, Flowers that come from deep in the soil unfold, The colors of pink, lavender, and yellow,
    • What Is A Garden? Poet: Reginald Arkell. What is a garden? Goodness knows! You've go a garden, I suppose: To one it is a piece of ground. For which some gravel must be found.
    • A Garden Fair. by Helen A. Fussell. I will sing you a song. Of a garden fair, Wherein were sown seeds. That brought blossoms rare. Love, joy and kindness, And hearty good cheer,
  1. Oct 8, 2023 · 3. Garden Dreams. This poem delves into the comforting embrace of a garden and how it becomes a refuge for the weary soul, offering solace and rejuvenation. In a corner, green and serene, Away from chaos, a sight unseen, Where dreams flutter, like butterflies, And hopes echo, with bird’s sky-high cries. Resting on a bench, thoughts drift away,

  2. May 19, 2017 · Alfred, Lord Tennyson, ‘ Come into the garden, Maud ’. This lyric from Tennyson’s longer 1855 poem Maud is possibly the most famous garden poem in all of English literature, with description of night as ‘the black bat’, and the troubled speaker standing ‘at the gate, alone’: Emily Dickinson, ‘ New feet within my garden go ’.

  3. Whittier. Thy summer garden ne’er. Was lovelier with its birds and flowers. Than is this silent place of snow. With feathery branches drooping low. Mary Howitt. | |. These famous Poets express there thoughts on gardens. The gardeners in your life will appreciate the Poets thoughts on gardens.

  4. Poems about Gardens. “I trust your Garden was willing to die ... I do not think that mine was—it perished with beautiful reluctance, like an evening star—". — Emily Dickinson, in a letter to her Aunt Katie Sweetser, 1880.

  5. The Garden by Moonlight. The sweet smells of heliotrope and night-scented stock. Dreaming the opium dreams of its folded poppies. Low as the sweet alyssum flowers at my feet. Moon-spikes shafting through the snow ball bush. As water is broken by the falling of a leaf. And beautiful as the silent sparks of the fireflies.

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  7. Mar 10, 2020 · Edna St. Vincent Millay: 'Blight' (1917) Edna St. Vincent Millay (February 22, 1892–October 19, 1950) was a Pulitzer Prize-winning American poet, playwright, and feminist. Her sonnets were celebrated by literary critics of the era. In this poem, she uses the metaphor of a blighted garden to explore negative emotions.

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