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Home  »  The Oxford Book of Victorian Verse  »  Rudyard Kipling (1865–1936)

Arthur Quiller-Couch, comp. The Oxford Book of Victorian Verse. 1922.

The Flowers

Rudyard Kipling (1865–1936)

BUY my English posies!

Kent and Surrey May

Violets of the Undercliff

Wet with Channel spray;

Cowslips from a Devon combe

Midland, furze afire

Buy my English posies

And I’ll sell your heart’s desire!

Buy my English posies!

You that scorn the May,

Won’t you greet a friend from home

Half the world away?

Green against the draggled drift,

Faint and frail and first—

Buy my Northern blood-root

And I’ll know where you were nursed:

Robin down the logging-road whistles, ‘Come to me!’

Spring has found the maple-grove, the sap is running free;

All the winds of Canada call the ploughing-rain.

Take the flower and turn the hour, and kiss your love again!

Buy my English posies!

Here ’s to match your need—

Buy a tuft of royal heath,

Buy a bunch of weed

White as sand of Muysenberg

Spun before the gale—

Buy my heath and lilies

And I’ll tell you whence you hail!

Under hot Constantia broad the vineyards lie—

Throned and thorn’d the aching berg props the speckless sky—

Slow below the Wynberg firs trails the tilted wain—

Take the flower and turn the hour, and kiss your love again!

Buy my English posies!

You that will not turn—

Buy my hot-wood clematis,

Buy a frond o’ fern

Gather’d where the Erskine leaps

Down the road to Lorne—

Buy my Christmas creeper

And I’ll say where you were born!

West away from Melbourne dust holidays begin—

They that mock at Paradise woo at Cora Lynn—

Through the great South Otway gums sings the great South Main—

Take the flower and turn the hour, and kiss your love again!

Buy my English posies!

Here ’s your choice unsold!

Buy a blood-red myrtle-bloom,

Buy the kowhai’s gold

Flung for gift on Taupo’s face,

Sign that spring is come—

Buy my clinging myrtle

And I’ll give you back your home!

Broom behind the windy town; pollen o’ the pine—

Bell-bird in the leafy deep where the ratas twine—

Fern above the saddle-bow, flax upon the plain—

Take the flower and turn the hour, and kiss your love again!

Buy my English posies!

Ye that have your own

Buy them for a brother’s sake

Overseas, alone.

Weed ye trample underfoot

Floods his heart abrim—

Bird ye never heeded,

O, she calls his dead to him!

Far and far our homes are set round the Seven Seas;

Woe for us if we forget, we that hold by these!

Unto each his mother-beach, bloom and bird and land—

Masters of the Seven Seas, O, love and understand!