Apples

Nora Hopper Chesson

1871 to 1906

Poem Image
Track 1

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Every 10th word

"Burden of rosy apples here I bear; 
Apples sweet as sin, and half as fair: 
Draw near, and eat, as Eve ate once, of old — 
And gather wisdom ere you gather gold. 
Ah, delay? Look deep into my eyes — 
Am not beautiful? Am I not wise— 
Though I once walked free in Paradise? 
Most fair I am, although my eyes are cold: 
Draw near, and the apples that I hold. 
The apples half give and half deny: 
Lo, I am Lilith! ye eat and die?" 

"Am I a that ye stand so far —? 
My foes were, my kinsmen now that are —
My foes were, my lovers that shall be 
By grace kindly blood poured out for ye. 
Am I stranger? yet my fruit's as red 
As hers, tempts the quick to be the dead. 
You her a barren while ago 
And me with stoning, even as a foe 
You turned away from your footsteps know. 
Now she hath cast you out, and here ye see 
Come back to seek grace, my fruit and me. 
Ye know me a little, yet God wot, 
Indeed I loved while ye knew me not. 
Lo! here I to-day with fruit to give, 
Azrael and his apples: eat and live!"