Alfred H. Miles, ed. Women Poets of the Nineteenth Century. 1907.
By A Handful of Honeysuckle (1878). III. Paradise Fancies, IIVA. Mary F. Robinson-Darmesteter (18571944)
Waking in Paradise,
A halo shone above his hair,
A glory in his eyes.
And heard the angels play,
Believe me, this was true last night
Though it is false to-day.
A minstrel strays,
An old golden viol
For ever he plays.
Beasts lie at his feet,
For none of God’s angels
Make music so sweet.
And lonely and mute,
I listen and long
For my heart is the lute.
Rose, lily and girasole!
In all the fields of Paradise
Every flower is a soul.
With petals lily fine,
Around my rose-bush fragrant-fair
Your tendrils twist and twine.
Their sweet embrace is Death.
But o’er my dead red roses swing,
Your lilies wreath on wreath.
There hung a ripe red apple,
The angels singing underneath
All praised its crimson dapple.
But ’mid the shouts and laughter
The apple fell o’er Heaven’s edge,
Sad angels looking after.
Beside a peaceful chapel,
An old priest flung it farther still,
“Bah, what a battered apple!”