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In
Sun and Shade: A Book of Verse
by
Frederick George Scott
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YULETIDE
IN FRANCE
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O LITTLE
sprig of rosemary, I pluck you in the garden,
In this little Gallic garden, on this misty winter’s
day.
I can hear the old rooks
calling,
And the distant shells are
falling,
But this little sprig of rosemary has borne my heart
away.
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O little sprig of rosemary, you bear me through
the ages
To the olden, golden Yuletides that our fathers
knew of yore,
When the midnight Mass bell
ringing,
Set the carol singers singing,
And sweet rosemary was scattered on the shining
chancel floor.
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O little sprig of rosemary, I hear the song and
laughter
When the boar’s head was carried in, adown
the armoured hall,
And the rosemary and bay
Were as sweet as new-mown
hay,
While the merriment of Yuletide was uniting great
and small.
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O little sprig of rosemary, I pluck you in the garden,
And my heart is sore and heavy with the cares we
have today,
For the Christ has been
among us,
And the Angel Hosts have
sung us
All the happy songs of Heaven, but they sounded
far away.
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O little sprig of rosemary, as I pluck you in the
garden,
In this little Gallic garden where the brave are
laid to rest,
And English mother weeping
A sad, sad Yule is keeping,
Remembering one who once was the Christ-Child on
her breast.
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O little sprig of rosemary, I thank you for the
dreaming,
In this hallowed Gallic garden on this misty winter’s
day;
Your mission is to leaven
This poor earth with thoughts
of Heaven,
When, for those brave hearts that slumber here,
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30 |
| We
fold our hands and pray.
St. Jans Capelle, France, 1916.
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