A YELLOW PANSY

To the wall of the old green garden

A butterfly, quivering, came;

His wings in the somber lichens

Played like a yellow flame.

He looked at the grey geraniums,

And the sleepy four-o'clocks;

He looked at the low lanes bordered

With the glossy-growing box.

He longed for the peace and the silence,

And the shadows that lengthened there,

And his wee wild heart was weary

Of skimming the endless air.

And now in the old green garden,—

I know not how it came,—

A single pansy is blooming,

Bright as a yellow flame.

And whenever a gay gust passes,

It quivers as if with pain,

For the butterfly-soul that is in it

Longs for the winds again!

Helen Gray Cone.