| Alfred H. Miles, ed. Women Poets of the Nineteenth Century. 1907. | | | A Book of Rhyme (1881) III. Not to Be | | By Augusta Webster (18401894) |
| | | THE ROSE said Let but this long rain be past, | |
| And I shall feel my sweetness in the sun | |
| And pour its fulness into life at last. | |
| But when the rain was done, | |
| But when dawn sparkled through unclouded air, | 5 |
| She was not there. | |
| |
| The lark said Let but winter be away, | |
| And blossoms come, and light, and I will soar, | |
| And lose the earth, and be the voice of day. | |
| But when the snows were oer, | 10 |
| But when spring broke in blueness overhead, | |
| The lark was dead. | |
| |
| And myriad roses made the garden glow, | |
| And skylarks carolled all the summer long | |
| What lack of birds to sing and flowers to blow? | 15 |
| Yet, ah, lost scent, lost song! | |
| Poor empty rose, poor lark that never trilled! | |
| Dead unfulfilled! | | | | |
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