The Poetry Corner

To A Bower.

By John Clare

Three times, sweet hawthorn! I have met thy bower, And thou hast gain'd my love, and I do feel An aching pain to leave thee: every flower Around thee opening doth new charms reveal, And binds my fondness stronger.--Wild wood bower, In memory's calendar thou'rt treasur'd up: And should we meet in some remoter hour, When all thy bloom to winter-winds shall droop; Ah, in life's winter, many a day to come, Should my grey wrinkles pass thy spot of ground, And find it bare--with thee no longer crown'd; Within the woodman's faggot torn from hence, Or chopt by hedgers up for yonder fence; Ah, should I chance by thee as then to come, I'll look upon thy nakedness with pain, And, as I view thy desolated doom, In fancy's eye I'll fetch thy shade again: And of this lovely day I'll think and sigh, And ponder o'er this sweetly-passing hour, And feel as then the throes of joys gone by, When I was young, and thou a blooming bower.