Poems (Ford)/To Ma Mere's Jonquille

TO MA MÈRE'S JONQUILLE.[1]
Pale child of the spring-time, thy golden stars gleamAway in a far, sunny land,And, warmed by the breath of that sweet southern clime,In fragrance and beauty expand;Then what dost thou here, where the cold northern blastOn fierce, icy pinions sweeps by?Why brave the wild air of our chill wintry clime,Fair child of a sunnier sky?
Oh, sweet little blossom, out here in the storm,'T is love makes the starry eyes shine;To gladden the heart of a friend, thou didst leaveThe land of the olive and vine;Nursed there by her care, thou hast followed her here,To bloom 'neath her fostering hand;Inhaling thy fragrance, she'll fancy she breathesThe air of her loved native land.
The vine-mantled hill-sides of beautiful FranceMay never again meet her view;But here, little flower, in the wilds of the West,She'll see them reflected in you.And often perchance, as she looks on your leaves,Her heart shall revisit againThe home of her childhood, the friends of her youth,The land of the sword and the pen.
Then offer thy incense with glad, grateful heart,Thy guardian's kind care to repay;And here, in the shade of the cloister, recallHer dear convent-home far away.Long, long may'st thou bloom ere the angels shall bearHer off to the bright world on high,To walk with the blest in the gardens of GodWhere blossoms ne'er wither or die.
  1. A little flower sent to Sister Stanislaus, of Saint Martin's, from her convent in France.