In Time Of Grief
Lizette Woodworth Reese
Dark, thinned, beside the wall of stone, The box dripped in the air; Its odor through my house was blown Into the chamber there. Remote and yet distinct the scent, The sole thing of the kind, As though one spoke a word half meant That left a sting behind. I knew not Grief would go from me, And naught of it be plain, Except how keen the box can be After a fall of rain.
Next 10 Poems
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : Keats
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : Love Came Back At Fall O' Dew
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : Lydia
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : Lydia Is Gone This Many A Year
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : Oh, Gray And Tender Is The Rain
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : Reserve
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : Spicewood
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : Tears
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : Telling The Bees
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : That Day You Came
Previous 10 Poems
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : Immortality
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : Herbs
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : Daffodils
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : Anne
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : After
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : A Song For Candlemas
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : A Rhyme Of Death's Inn
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : A Little Song Of Life
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : A Holiday
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : A Haunting Memory