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Spring Tidings
by
Ruby Archer


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A world of snow, and winter yet,
    The weather-man decrees.
He listens to the bragging wind,
    I hearken roots of trees.
It thawed of late, and roots lay out
    Along the way I take;
I heard them deeply sigh, as does
    A dreamer soon to wake.
And lo—upon my windowsill
Opens a yellow daffodil.

Gold-armored herald of the spring,
    Come privately to tell
That snow is but the calyx warm,
    The bud begins to swell.
So weather-man, go prophesy,
    And credulous, go hear—
My herald gives your gloom the lie,
    I know that Spring is near!
For lo—upon my windowsill
Opens a yellow daffodil.


This poem is in the public domain.

 


Ruby Archer (1873 – 1961) was born and raised in Kansas City, Missouri. She wrote a number of poems during her lifetime, many of them collected in her book, Little Poems.
She also wrote articles on a number of different subjects and translated French and German lyrics and plays.

 

 


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