Meanwhile the dragon, seeing him clean gone, Followed him not, but crying horribly, Caught up within her jaws a block of stone And ground it into powder, then turned she, With cries that folk could hear far out at sea, And reached the treasure set apart of old, To brood above the hidden heaps of gold.
Yet was she seen again on many a day By some half-waking mariner, or herd, Playing amid the ripples of the bay, Or on the hills making all things afeard, Or in the wood, that did that castle gird, But never any man again durst go
To seek her woman's form, and end her woe.
This, too, be your glory great, Primroses, you do not wait, As the other flowers do, For the Spring to smile on you, But with coming are content, Asking no encouragement. Ere the hardy crocus cleaves Sunny borders 'neath the eaves; Ere the thrush his song rehearse, Sweeter than all poets' verse; Ere the early bleating lambs Cling like shadows to their dams; Ere the blackthorn breaks to white, Snowy-hooded anchorite;
Out from every hedge you look, You are bright by every brook, Wearing for your sole defence Fearlessness of innocence. While the daffodils still waver, Ere the jonquil gets its savour; While the linnets yet but pair, You are fledged, and everywhere. Nought can daunt you, nought distress, Neither cold nor sunlessness. You, when Lent sleet flies apace, Look the tempest in the face; As descend the flakes more slow, From your eyelids shake the snow, And, when all the clouds have flown, Meet the sun's smile with your own. Nothing ever makes you less Gracious to ungraciousness.
March may bluster up and down,
Pettish April sulk and frown; Closer to their skirts you cling, Coaxing Winter to be Spring.
Making leafless lane and wood
Vernal with your hardihood.
Other lovely things are rare,
You are prodigal as fair.
Then, when your sweet task is done, And the wild-flowers, one by one, Here, there, everywhere do blow, Primroses, you haste to go,
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