| 
 Amends to Nature by Arthur Symons 
						I have loved colours, and not flowers; Their motion, not the swallows wings;
 And wasted more than half my hours
 Without the comradeship of things.
 
 How is it, now, that I can see,
 With love and wonder and delight,
 The children of the hedge and tree,
 The little lords of day and night?
 
 How is it that I see the roads,
 No longer with usurping eyes,
 A twilight meeting-place for toads,
 A mid-day mart for butterflies?
 
 I feel, in every midge that hums,
 Life, fugitive and infinite,
 And suddenly the world becomes
 A part of me and I of it.
 |