Here is a tale for any one who wishes:
There grew a cabbage once among the flowers,
A plain, broad cabbage a good wench, whose hours
Were kitchen-busy with plebeian dishes.
The rose and lily, toilless, without mottle,
Patricians born, despised her: 'How unpleasant!'
They cried;'What odour! Worse than any peasant
Who soils God's air! Give us our smelling- bottle.'
There came a gentleman who owned the garden,
Looking about him at both flower and edible,
Admiring here and there; a simple sinner,
Who sought some bud to be his heart's sweet warden:
But passed the flowers and took it seems incredible!
That cabbage! But a man must have his dinner.
The Cabbage
Madison Julius Cawein
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Poem topics: flower, god, heart, rose, sweet, good, plain, garden, simple, busy, kitchen, Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
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About The Cabbage
The Cabbage is a poem by Madison Julius Cawein. This page includes the poem text, poet information, related topics, comments, and similar poems.
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