WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Marguerite; or, The Isle of Demons and Other Poems cover

Marguerite; or, The Isle of Demons and Other Poems

Chapter 51: FLORAL ENVOY.
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

A varied collection of lyric and narrative verse centered on a long romantic legend about a woman’s ordeal on a haunted island and its personal and moral aftermath, accompanied by shorter sonnets, ballads, and occasional pieces. Many poems draw on Canadian history and local scenes, offering meditative nature writing, urban sketches of Montreal and Ottawa life, winter and carnival scenes, elegies and civic tributes, and moral or humorous vignettes about everyday people. Themes of love, exile, faith, memory, and social concern recur across diverse forms and voices, blending personal reflection with regional colour and historic atmosphere.

FLORAL ENVOY.

To F. B.

I. This envoy of flowers, A deputy meet, Your birthday, my friend, Is instructed to greet, And my kindliest wishes To kindly repeat.— Interpret aright In friendship’s white light What the beautiful flowers Would say, could they speak. The sensitive flowers, All voiceless and weak,— Their meaning, involved In their bloom and their breath, Despairing to utter, They haste to their death.
II. The sweet-scented flowers Must droop and decay, But not what their delicate Pantings would say. The messenger fails, But the message survives— An essence, a spirit, That throbs in the lives Of atoms too subtile For kinship with clay.
III. All kindly emotion, That passes the portal Of a heart that is truthful, Is thenceforth immortal: In its mute transmigration From age unto age, In the love of the maid In the thought of the sage, It blossoms afresh, It persists without end, Joins lover to lover, Binds friend unto friend. Then, seeing that flowers And words are but weak, Take care that to-night, You interpret aright What the sensitive flowers Would say could they speak.