In A Garden
Elizabeth Jennings
When the gardener has gone this garden Looks wistful and seems waiting an event. It is so spruce, a metaphor of Eden And even more so since the gardener went, Quietly godlike, but of course, he had Not made me promise anything and I Had no one tempting me to make the bad Choice. Yet I still felt lost and wonder why. Even the beech tree from next door which shares Its shadow with me, seemed a kind of threat. Everything was too neat, and someone cares In the wrong way. I need not have stood long Mocked by the smell of a mown lawn, and yet I did. Sickness for Eden was so strong.
Next 10 Poems
- Elizabeth Jennings : In Memory Of Anyone Unknown To Me
- Elizabeth Jennings : One Flesh
- Ben Jonson : A Celebration Of Charis: I. His Excuse For Loving
- Ben Jonson : A Celebration Of Charis: Iv. Her Triumph
- Ben Jonson : A Farewell To The World
- Ben Jonson : A Fit Of Rhyme Against Rhyme
- Ben Jonson : A Hymn On The Nativity Of My Savior
- Ben Jonson : A Hymn To God The Father
- Ben Jonson : A Part Of An Ode
- Ben Jonson : A Pindaric Ode
Previous 10 Poems
- Elizabeth Jennings : Friday
- Elizabeth Jennings : Delay
- Elizabeth Jennings : Answers
- Elizabeth Jennings : Accepted
- Elizabeth Jennings : Absence
- Elizabeth Jennings : A Performance Of Henry V At Stratford-upon-avon
- Elizabeth Jennings : A Chorus
- James Henry Leigh Hunt : To The Grasshopper And The Cricket
- James Henry Leigh Hunt : To Robert Batty, M.d., On His Giving Me A Lock Of Milton's Hair
- James Henry Leigh Hunt : To A Fish