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INTRODUCTORY MATERIAL Frontispiece | Copyright Notice | Dedication | Author’s Note | Poem: A Secret Garden
FRONTISPIECE (Depicting a scene from Chapter VII)
COPYRIGHT 1925, BY THE CENTURY CO.
DEDICATION
TO A. M. E.
AUTHOR’S NOTE
The poem entitled “A Secret Garden” is
reprinted by permission of the proprietors of Punch--a courtesy which the author wishes gratefully to acknowledge.
A SECRET GARDEN
Butterflies of blue and green Make a living dancing screen; Sunlight shed upon the grass Swordlike would forbid me pass; Yet a peacock took this way With his wives, and yesterday I could hear a strange bird sing Just beyond the opening-- Such a bird as can be found Only on enchanted ground, Or in dreams; and I must go Softly. See! The Sal trunks grow Sombre now, and in the leaves A black-and-yellow spider weaves Webs that brush the face like lips. Now the dwindling deer-path dips To a stream unseen, unlit; Crocodiles abound in it, And a million million flies, Startled, dance to daunt my eyes. These I pass and stoop to take A grassy tunnel where a snake Has cast his dappled tawny skin And lain awhile asleep. I’m in! No wonder sentinels were placed-- Butterflies and light and laced Spiders’ webs and gloomy aisles, Water, flies and crocodiles-- To guard the gate; for here is spread All that bird had heralded.
A little garden, where the trees Bear milky blossoms for the bees, And, in a tangle, tiny grapes (Here sit the grey shock-headed apes) And oranges and purple plums (So I know why the peacock comes), And scarlet berries (so I know Where the emerald parrots go When they spurn the common wood And wheel and stoop).
But ah, it’s good To light upon a garden thus Planted once by one of us, Planned and planted by a man Who is dead (and yet the plan Lives and gives delight to these, To wizened apes and birds and bees), And good that, knowing every glade, They chose the place that man hath made.
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