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    The Despot

    by Edith Nesbit
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    Page 1 of 1
    The garden mould was damp and chill;
    Winter had had his brutal will
    Since over all the year's content
    His devastating legions went.

    The Spring's bright banners came: there woke
    Millions of little growing folk
    Who thrilled to know the winter done,
    Gave thanks, and strove towards the sun.

    Not so the elect; reserved, and slow
    To trust a stranger-sun and grow,
    They hesitated, cowered and hid,
    Waiting to see what others did.

    Yet even they, a little, grew,
    Put out prim leaves to day and dew,
    And lifted level formal heads
    In their appointed garden beds.

    The gardener came: he coldly loved
    The flowers that lived as he approved,
    That duly, decorously grew
    As he, the despot, meant them to.

    He saw the wildlings flower more brave
    And bright than any cultured slave;
    Yet, since he had not set them there,
    He hated them for being fair.

    So he uprooted, one by one,
    The free things that had loved the sun,
    The happy, eager, fruitful seeds
    Who had not known that they were weeds.
    Page 1 of 1
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