Here you will find the Poem Perennial Calendar (excerpt) of poet William Forster
If now the sun extends his cheering beam, And all the landscape casts a golden gleam Clear is the sky, and calm and soft the air, And through thin mist each object looks more fair. Then, where the villa rears its sheltering grove, Along the southern lawn 'tis sweet to rove: There dark green pines, behind, their boughs extend, And bright spruce firs like pyramids ascend, And round their tops, in many a pendent row, Their scaly cones of shining auburn show; There the broad cedar's level branches spread, And the tall cyprus lifts its spiry head; With alaternus ilex interweaves, And laurels mix their glossy oval leaves; And gilded holly crimson fruit displays, And white viburnum o'er the border strays. Where these from storms the spacious greenhouse screen, Ev'n now the eye beholds a flowery scene; There crystal sashes ward the injurious cold, And rows of benches fair exotics hold; Rich plants, that Afric's sunny cape supplies, Or o'er the isles of either India rise. While striped geranium shows its tufts of red, And verdant myrtles grateful fragrance shed; A moment stay to mark the vivid bloom, A moment stay to catch the high perfume.