Garden Under Lightning
Published in Poem Of The Day
Out of the storm that muffles shining night
Flash roses ghastly-sweet,
And lilies far too pale.
There is a pang of livid light,
A terror of familiarity,
I see a dripping swirl of leaves and petals
That I once tended happily,
Borders of flattened, frightened little things,
And writhing paths I surely walked in that other life-
Day?
My specter-garden beckons to me,
Gibbers horribly-
And vanishes!
About this poem
"Garden Under Lightning (Ghost-Story)" was published in Leonora Speyer's book "A Canopic Jar" (E.P. Dutton & Co., 1921).
About Leonora Speyer
Leonora Speyer was born in Washington, D.C., in 1872. She won the Pulitzer Prize in 1927 for her collection "Fiddler's Farewell" (Knopf, 1926). Speyer died in 1956.
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This poem is in the public domain. Distributed by King Features Syndicate
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