The Poetry Corner

The Mossrose

By Henry John Newbolt, Sir

Walking to-day in your garden, O gracious lady, Little you thought as you turned in that alley remote and shady, And gave me a rose and asked if I knew its savour-- The old-world scent of the mossrose, flower of a bygone favour-- Little you thought as you waited the word of appraisement, Laughing at first and then amazed at my amazement, That the rose you gave was a gift already cherished, And the garden whence you plucked it a garden long perished. But I--I saw that garden, with its one treasure The tiny mossrose, tiny even by childhood's measure, And the long morning shadow of the dusty laurel, And a boy and a girl beneath it, flushed with a childish quarrel. She wept for her one little bud: but he, outreaching The hand of brotherly right, would take it for all her beseeching: And she flung her arms about him, and gave like a sister, And laughed at her own tears, and wept again when he kissed her. So the rose is mine long since, and whenever I find it And drink again the sharp sweet scent of the moss behind it, I remember the tears of a child, and her love and her laughter, And the morning shadows of youth and the night that fell thereafter.