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Heart of New England

Chapter 33: AN OLD-WORLD CONVENT GARDEN
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About This Book

A lyric collection that moves through New England’s seasons, landscapes, and local history, blending pastoral description with folklore, legend, and occasional patriotic and religious reflections. Poems evoke shorelines, orchards, pine woods, and village life while honoring Pilgrim ancestry and the fortitude of pioneer women; other pieces imagine fairies, haunted houses, pirate lore, and convent gardens. Varied forms include children’s verses, contemplative nature lyrics, and occasional odes, united by a regionally rooted voice that balances celebration of place with quiet moral and communal meditation.

AN OLD-WORLD CONVENT GARDEN

Walled quiet from the din.
So near, of worldly strife;
A cloistered peace within,
A life apart from life.
Shrines bowered in roses sweet,
And in a hidden dell
Worn by accustomed feet,
A holy well.
Along the ancient wall
Fruit basking in the sun;
Flowers radiant and tall—
A coquette every one.
Bees busy on the stalks,
Birds mating in the weeds—
Here a pale Sister walks,
Telling her beads.
High walls to shut aside
The world’s dear bliss and care!
O Birds, your nestlings hide
In sanctuary there.
High walls to her, to me—
But ah! to wings, how low;
Blest little Birds, quite free
To come—and go!