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Home  »  The World’s Best Poetry  »  The Use of Flowers

Bliss Carman, et al., eds. The World’s Best Poetry. 1904.

V. Trees: Flowers: Plants

The Use of Flowers

Mary Howitt (1799–1888)

GOD might have bade the earth bring forth

Enough for great and small,

The oak-tree and the cedar-tree,

Without a flower at all.

We might have had enough, enough

For every want of ours,

For luxury, medicine, and toil,

And yet have had no flowers.

Then wherefore, wherefore were they made,

All dyed with rainbow light,

All fashioned with supremest grace,

Upspringing day and night:—

Springing in valleys green and low,

And on the mountains high,

And in the silent wilderness

Where no man passes by?

Our outward life requires them not,—

Then wherefore had they birth?—

To minister delight to man,

To beautify the earth;

To comfort man,—to whisper hope,

Whene’er his faith is dim,

For who so careth for the flowers

Will care much more for him!