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				Title:     Flood-Tide Of Flowers 
			    
Author: Henry Van Dyke [
More Titles by Van Dyke]		                
			    
IN HOLLAND
 The laggard winter ebbed so slow
 With freezing rain and melting snow,
 It seemed as if the earth would stay
 Forever where the tide was low,
 In sodden green and watery gray.
 But now from depths beyond our sight,
 The tide is turning in the night,
 And floods of colour long concealed
 Come silent rising toward the light,
 Through garden bare and empty field.
 And first, along the sheltered nooks,
 The crocus runs in little brooks
 Of joyance, till by light made bold
 They show the gladness of their looks
 In shining pools of white and gold.
 The tiny scilla, sapphire blue,
 Is gently seeping in, to strew
 The earth with heaven; and sudden rills
 Of sunlit yellow, sweeping through,
 Spread into lakes of daffodils.
 The hyacinths, with fragrant heads,
 Have overflowed their sandy beds,
 And fill the earth with faint perfume,
 The breath that Spring around her sheds.
 And now the tulips break in bloom!
 A sea, a rainbow-tinted sea,
 A splendour and a mystery,
 Floods o'er the fields of faded gray:
 The roads are full of folks in glee,
 For lo,--to-day is Easter Day!
April, 1916.
[The end]
Henry Van Dyke's poem: Flood-tide Of Flowers
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