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In Tuscany

DOWN San Miniato in the afternoon
    Slowly we drove through still and golden air.
'T was winter, but the day was soft as June;
    Florence was spread beneath us, passing fair.
 
The matchless city! Set about with flowers,
    Peaceful along her Arno’s banks she lay;
Her treasured splendors, roofs and domes and towers,
    In tender light of the Italian day.
 
Sweet breathed the roses, glowing far and wide,
    Pink, gold, and crimson; dark in stately gloom
Stood the thick cypresses; on every side
    The laurestinus, rich with creamy bloom.
 
And exquisite, pale, sharp-leaved olives grew
    In moonlight colors, silver-green and gray,
While, lifting their proud heads high in the blue,
    Sprang the superb stone-pines beside the way.
 
Oh, wonderful, I thought, beyond compare!
    And hushed with pleasure silent sat and gazed,
When lo! a child’s voice, and I grew aware
    Of loveliness that left me all amazed.
 
A little beggar girl, that leaping came
    Forth from the roadside, reaching out her hand,
And dancing like a bright and buoyant flame,
    Besought us in the music of her land.
 
Her eyes were like a midnight full of stars
    Below the dazzling beauty of her brows,
Her dusky hair dark as the cloud that bars
    The moon in troubled skies when tempests rouse;
 
A mouth where lightning-sweet the sudden smile
    Came, went and came, and flashed into my face,
And caught my heart, as, holding fast the while
    The carriage edge, she ran with rapid grace.
 
Who could withstand her pleading, who resist
    The magic of those love-compelling eyes,
Those lips the red pomegranate flowers had kissed,
    The voice that charmed like woven melodies!
 
Not we! Surely, I thought, imperial blood,
    Some priceless current from a kingly line,
Ran royal in her veins, —a sunny flood
    That marked her with its fine, mysterious sign.
 
She was not born to ask, but to command;
    She seemed to crown the wonder of the day,
The perfect blossom of that glorious land,
    While her sweet “Grazie!” followed on our way,
 
As down 'mid olive, cypress, stately pine,
    Among the roses in a dream we passed,
Through glamour of the time and place divine,
    Till Arno’s quiet banks were reached at last,
 
And pleasant rest. 'T is years since those fair hours,
    But their rich memories live, their sun and shade,
Beautiful Florence set about with flowers,
    And San Miniato’s peerless beggar maid.
Other works by Celia Thaxter...



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