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Hazel bloom

Chapter 15: Hazel Bloom.
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About This Book

A compact collection of lyrical poems and short narratives that meditate on motherhood, faith, and the consolations found in nature. Many pieces recall childhood and domestic scenes, confront suffering and loss, and draw on Christian imagery to offer comfort and moral reflection. The verse moves between contemplative monologue, descriptive nature writing, and occasional narrative sketches, balancing personal feeling with devotional and ethical concerns. Throughout, simple pleasures—flowers, seasons, quiet homelife—are set against questions of destiny, grief, and spiritual hope.

Hazel Bloom.

When paths that in summer were fringed with lush grass,
Are raspy with frost-whitened blades as you pass,
When the arbor’s denuded of clusters and leaves,
And the Ivy’s bare vines are entwining the eaves,
When the bright tinted sumach has changed to a brown
And the wind-shaken forest drops summer wealth down—
The autumn’s rich robings of crimson and gold
In the path of the years, to be trampled as mould—
When the beauty of purple-hued asters is shed,
And the glory of goldenrod faded and dead,
When the song-birds, we loved for their jubilant tune,
Have gone where they find a perennial June,
When clouds that were downy on the summer’s bright blue,
Have draped all the skies in a somberly hue,
When the orchard has yielded its riches of fruit,
And its life-feeding myst’ry is hid in the root—
The Aftermath gathered—the last sheaves of grain—
When Nature seems all in a funeral train,
Then Hazel buds burst thro’ their scales into bloom,
And glow like the stars that rob midnight of gloom.
When brooklets, unfettered, went leaping in glee,
O’er rocks and thro’ woodlands, adown to the sea—
When the bloom-time of Spring, in its glory, was here,
And earth all resounding with music and cheer,
When asphodels loaded with fragrance the air
And vied with the roses in loveliness rare,
Witch-Hazel, from Nature, seemed standing apart,
The wee, golden buds were asleep in its heart,
And sunshine and shower besought it, in vain,
To star, with its bloom, Flora’s garlanded fane.
Oh, marvel of beauty—bright blossoms of gold!
They show us the life leafless branches enfold.
’Tis the flower of hope with this lesson of cheer—
’Tis the season of rest, not “The death of the year,”
When, Nature, reposing in the bosom of God,
Feels the throb of His heart ’neath her snow-mantled sod—
At the soul of All-life with new life is imbued—
At the Fountain of Beauty, enriched and renewed.
* * * * *
Aye, symbol of Hope and the star gleam of Faith,
That give to Life’s autumn a glow—
A spirit revealed, while the seeming of Death
Lies palled in the brown leaves below.
A mission it has that was given of Him
Who gave it its blossoming time;
Thus blooming alone—desolation around,
Defying the glittering rime,
It speaks to the soul—’tis an oracle sweet,
His token, His promise and bond
That, tho’ passing thro’ change that leads down thro’ the tomb,
There’s a beautiful Springtime beyond.