TO A CHILD.

Dear Owain, when you are minded

To gather the perfect thing,

Over Abergavenny

Climb in the evening!—

I have seen where orchis dances

A saraband with the Spring;

Where samphire leans to ocean,

And shakes in the word he saith;

Or the brood of the peasant ragweed,

Innocent, sweet of breath,

Runs with a wild Welsh river

That never has heard of death;

Where thrift, with a foot shell-tinted,

On the dark coast-road delays;

And foxglove flames in a ruin;

And campion meekly lays

On a crag’s uneven shoulder

Her satiny cheek, for days.

Well: these in their mortal beauty,

And these in their youth, abound.

But over Abergavenny,

Past sunset-hour, I found

(O Holy Grail of a flower!)

The sun on the hilltop ground.