Come here! come here! cousin Mary, and see What fair, ripe peaches there are on the tree — On the very same bough that was given to me By father, one day last spring.
When it looked so beautiful, all in the blow, And I wanted to pluck it, he told me, you know, I might, but that waiting a few months would show The fruit, that patience might bring.
And as I perceived, by the sound of his voice, And the look of his eye, it was clearly his choice That it should not be touched, I have now to rejoice That I told him we‘ d let it remain;
For, had it been gathered when full in the flower, Its blossoms had withered, perhaps, in an hour, And nothing on earth could have given the power That would make them flourish again.
But now, of a fruit so delicious and sweet I‘ ve enough for myself and my playmates a treat; And they tell me, besides, that the kernels secrete What, if planted, will make other trees:
For the shell will come open to let down the root; A sprout will spring up, whence the branches will shoot; There‘ ll be buds, leaves, and blossoms; and then comes the fruit — Such beautiful peaches as these!
And Nature, they say, like a mighty machine, Has a wheel in a wheel, which, if aught comes between, It ruins her work, as it might have been seen, Had it not given patience this trial.
From this, I‘ ll be careful to keep it in mind, When the blossoms I love, that there lingers behind A better reward, that the trusting shall find For a trifling self-denial.
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