| OH, give us pleasure in the flowers to-day; | |
| And give us not to think so far away | |
| As the uncertain harvest; keep us here | |
| All simply in the springing of the year. | |
| Oh, give us pleasure in the orchard white, | 5 |
| Like nothing else by day, like ghosts by night; | |
| And make us happy in the happy bees, | |
| The swarm dilating round the perfect trees. | |
| And make us happy in the darting bird | |
| That suddenly above the bees is heard, | 10 |
| The meteor that thrusts in with needle bill, | |
| And off a blossom in mid air stands still. | |
| For this is love and nothing else is love, | |
| The which it is reserved for God above | |
| To sanctify to what far ends He will, | 15 |
| But which it only needs that we fulfil. |
This lovely poem was written by Robert Frost in 1915. I figured with spring on the horizon it would be nice to do one about spring!! One thing I've noticed about myself is that one day I look outside and I see barren brown branches and then the next day, I see nothing but green!! Right?? Am I the only one that misses the change?? That's why this poem really stuck out to me--it's asking that we take a moment and be happy with everything else. Frost starts, "give us pleasure in the flowers to-day" (Line 1) not tomorrow but today. What this reminds me of is the day lily. They only bloom for one day, and then new ones come the next. Frost is advising us to enjoy each daily bloom because they will bring different beauty each day. He continues, "give us not to think so far away/ as the uncertain harvest" (Lines 2-3). We should not think about what will come in the summer nor the fall. We should not think about what we will have to harvest in the autumn. We should be thinking about those daily lilies that only come once a year in the spring, and only bloom for one day. Then we are encouraged to be "happy" because of the "happy bees" that "swarm dilating round the perfect trees" (Lines 7-8). The bees are happy because they know it's spring. Spring for bees is their harvest season. It's what they look forward to in the fall because they are the ones that get to spread the growing beauty through pollination. In a way, they start the harvest. Without pollinated plants, what fruit shall you harvest come fall? The bees are in their happy place because they know that they are bringing the day lilies to life and bringing everything else that goes with spring too. And same with the birds! The birds carry seeds and drop them which causes whatever that seed was to plant itself and grow. It's the circle of spring. The birds plant the seeds, the bees pollinate the seeds, and the humans harvest what the seeds produce. He concludes that love "is reserved for God above" because God is the one who made all creatures great and small, wise and wonderful. God created this circle because it's how we all live. Frost is trying to show us how we should be thankful for all the creatures, big and small, that help us get to where we are happy and buzzing around trees ready for harvest. He's praying that he will wake up and see the day lilies and see the buzzing bees and see the flying birds all at work. So tomorrow, wake up, walk outside (maybe with a jacket..it's still pretty cold in the morning) stand there and just listen. Just listen to the buzzing bees, the flying birds, spring coming to life. Look out your car window as your drive to work or school and look at the budding trees and the day lilies. They only ever come out once, and you don't want to miss something that you'll only ever get to see once.