Erica

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38

Erica

Sit down with me awhile beside the heath-corner.

Here have I laboured hour on hour in winter,
Digging thick clay, breaking up clods, and draining,
Carrying away cold mud, bringing up sandy loam,
Bringing these rocks and setting them all in their places,
To be shelter from winds, shade from too burning sun.

See, now, how sweetly all these plants are springing
Green, ever green, and flowering turn by turn,
Delicate heaths, and their fragrant Australian kinsmen,
Shedding, as once unknown in New Holland, strange scents on the air,
And purple and white daboecia—the Irish heather—
Said in the nurseryman’s list to be so well suited
For small gardens, for rock gardens, and for graveyards.

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About this page...

Title: From a Garden in the Antipodes

Author: Evelyn Hayes

Publication details: Sidgwick and Jackson Limited, 1929, London

Part of: New Zealand Texts Collection

This text is the subject of: National Library of New Zealand

Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 New Zealand Licence