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THE PLANTING OF THE APPLE-TREE.
Come, let us plant the apple-tree!
Cleave the tough greensward
with the spade;
Wide let its hollow bed be
made;
There gently lay the roots,
and there
Sift the dark mould with kindly
care,
And press it o’er
them tenderly,
As, round the sleeping infant’s
feet,
We softly fold the cradle-sheet:
So plant we the
apple-tree.
What plant we in the apple-tree?
Buds, which the breath of
summer days
Shall lengthen into leafy
sprays;
Boughs, where the thrush with
crimson breast
Shall haunt and sing and hide
her nest.
We plant upon
the sunny lea
A shadow for the noontide
hour,
A shelter from the summer
shower,
When we plant
the apple-tree.
What plant we in the apple-tree?
Sweets for a hundred flowery
springs,
To load the May-wind’s
restless wings,
When, from the orchard-row,
he pours
Its fragrance through our
open doors;
A world of blossoms
for the bee;
Flowers for the sick girl’s
silent room;
For the glad infant sprigs
of bloom.
We plant with
the apple-tree.
What plant we in the apple-tree?
Fruits that shall swell in
sunny June,
And redden in the August noon,
And drop, as gentle airs come
by
That fan the blue September
sky;
While children,
wild with noisy glee,
Shall scent their fragrance
as they pass,
And search for them the tufted
grass
At the foot of
the apple-tree.
And when above this apple-tree
The winter stars are quivering
bright,
And winds go howling through
the night,
Girls, whose young eyes o’erflow
with mirth,
Shall peel its fruit by cottage-hearth,
And guests in
prouder homes shall see,
Heaped with the orange and
the grape,
As fair as they in tint and
shape,
The fruit of the
apple-tree.
The fruitage of this apple-tree
Winds and our flag of stripe
and star
Shall bear to coasts that
lie afar,
Where men shall wonder at
the view,
And ask in what fair groves
they grew;
And they who roam
beyond the sea
Shall look, and think of childhood’s
day,
And long hours passed in summer
play
In the shade of
the apple-tree.
Each year shall give this
apple-tree
A broader flush of roseate
bloom,
A deeper maze of verdurous
gloom,
And loosen, when the frost-clouds
lower,
The crisp brown leaves in
thicker shower;
The years shall
come and pass, but we
Shall hear no longer, where
we lie,
The summer’s songs,
the autumn’s sigh,
In the boughs
of the apple-tree.