Kenneth Slessor

Here you will find the Poem Elegy In A Botanic Gardens of poet Kenneth Slessor

Elegy In A Botanic Gardens

THE smell of birds' nests faintly burning 
Is autumn. In the autumn I came 
Where spring had used me better, 
To the clear red pebbles and the men of stone 
And foundered beetles, to the broken Meleager 
And thousands of white circles drifting past, 
Cold suns in water; even to the dead grove 
Where we had kissed, to the Tristania tree 
Where we had kissed so awkwardly, 
Noted by swans with damp, accusing eyes, 
All gone to-day; only the leaves remain, 
Gaunt paddles ribbed with herringbones 
Of watermelon-pink. Never before 
Had I assented to the hateful name 
Meryta Macrophylla, on a tin tag. 
That was no time for botany. But now the schools, 
The horticulturists, come forth 
Triumphantly with Latin. So be it now, 
Meryta Macrophylla, and the old house, 
Ringed with black stone, no Georgian Headlong Hall 
With glass-eye windows winking candles forth, 
Stuffed with French horns, globes, air-pumps, telescopes 
And Cupid in a wig, playing the flute, 
But truly, and without escape, 
THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM, 
Repeated dryly in Roman capitals, 
THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM.