An Olive Leaf

Nora Hopper Chesson

Nora Hopper Chesson portrait

1871 to 1906

Poem Image
Track 1

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As does syringa, dying with the beat
Nor pale love-in-a-mist;
I am no hair-fern, beautiful and brief,
But pale and wan I grow, an olive leaf.
And I shall change in all my fibres, — know
Of the wild wings of those wild birds that nest
To crowns-imperial and the spreading balm.
Here on my branch, a gray-green leaf alone;
So shall I breathe, burn, bloom, and wither so
All beauty to whose heights I dare to grow.
To be her herald when the windflowers yield
Dreaming of amethyst;
Redden to ruby, blush into a rose,
To height of heart's desire reach up, and go
Has set her sigil in the hollow palm,
Set me, I say, in this one graven palm,
But pluck me — lay me in a hand where grief
Held in that hand — for whose love have I grown
My green shall deepen to an emerald glow,
In the warm whiteness of a woman's breast.
Yea, change and grow as passionately sweet
Pale am I, scentless, grayish-green of leaf;
Has set her sigil plain as spring has sealed
No violet that her purple web has spun,
Content, having known the best that I could know.
The iris of all flowers in the field
I am no rose kissed scarlet by the sun,

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