Butterflies Poem by Mary Dow Brine

Butterflies

Rating: 5.0


Creatures of golden, sunshiny weather,
Coquetting with blossoms for hours together!

Happiest ever when skies are blue,
And sunshine your merriest moments woo!

Bright-robed and beautiful, artless and gay,
Merrily idling the summer away.

Much ye remind me, butterflies bright,
Of a winsome maiden, with heart as light

And fickle as yours, as the days go by;
Fit for only a sunshiny sky!

Coquetting with hearts and love awhile,
Then off and away with a careless smile.

But when the summer at last has fled,
Butterflies' holiday, too, lies dead.

Saturday, December 13, 2014
Topic(s) of this poem: butterfly
COMMENTS OF THE POEM
* Sunprincess * 28 August 2015

............beautifully penned, a most lovely poem ★

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Rajnish Manga 13 December 2014

This is a perfect poem where the scene comes alive with apt and delicate words. I like it.

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