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1835–1905

A WITHERED VIOLET.

Sarah Chauncey Woolsey

I PLUCKED a purple violet, Its petals were all dewy wet, I held it tightly for an hour, And then I dropped the faded flower;

Dropped it and lost unconsciously, Scarce thinking of the how or why. ’ Twas hours since, but my fingers yet Are scented with the violet;

The fragrant spell, invisible, Has caught and holds me in it’ s sway. I would not flee if flight might be; The violet still rules my day.

I plucked a flower when life was young, I chose it all the flowers among. It was so fresh, it was so fair, Heaven’ s very dew seemed cradled there;

A little while it smiled in morn, And then it withered and was gone. ’ Tis long years since, but every hour I taste the perfume of that flower.

Still it endures, and all day pours A balm of fragrance on the way. I catch its breath high over death; A memory still rules my day.

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A WITHERED VIOLET. · Sarah Chauncey Woolsey · Poetry Cove