Dame Mary Gilmore

Here you will find thePoemThe First Thrushof poet Dame Mary Gilmore

The First Thrush

Though leaves have fallen long since, The wagtails flirt and flit, Glad in the morning sun; While, on the knotted quince, The dewdrops, pearled on it, Bead to a little run. . . . Soft as a breathing air There came a lovely sound Out of the branches bare; So rich it was, and round, Sense stood, in listening bound, Stilled to its sweetness there! It was the thrush's note, That seemed as though his heart On some loved thing did dote; As though he yearned apart, Knowing some hidden smart, Pain in the long sweet rote. There, as the spider hung Grey-breasted 'gainst the brown Skin of the quince, he sung A song that o'er the town, Rose up as though to crown The tree-tops whence it sprung. And now, it seems to me, That long full breath he drew, Like perfume shed on air, Still dwells within the tree, Though long ago he flew, And left it naked there.