In this category:

    FLEURSDUMAL POETRY LIBRARY - classic, modern, experimental & visual & sound poetry, poetry in translation, city poets, poetry archive, pre-raphaelites, editor's choice, etc.
    POETRY ARCHIVE
    Archive C-D
    FICTION & NON-FICTION - books, booklovers, lit. history, biography, essays, translations, short stories, columns, literature: celtic, beat, travesty, war, dada & de stijl, drugs, dead poets
    FICTION & NONFICTION ARCHIVE
    Archive C-D
    FLEURSDUMAL POETRY LIBRARY - classic, modern, experimental & visual & sound poetry, poetry in translation, city poets, poetry archive, pre-raphaelites, editor's choice, etc.
    WAR POETRY
    Cromwell, Gladys
    TOMBEAU DE LA JEUNESSE - early death: writers, poets & artists who died young
    Gladys Cromwell

New on FdM

  1. ‘Il y a’ poème par Guillaume Apollinaire
  2. Eugene Field: At the Door
  3. J.H. Leopold: Ik ben een zwerver overal
  4. My window pane is broken by Lesbia Harford
  5. Van Gogh: Poets and Lovers in The National Gallery London
  6. Eugene Field: The Advertiser
  7. CROSSING BORDER – International Literature & Music Festival The Hague
  8. Expositie Adya en Otto van Rees in het Stedelijk Museum Schiedam
  9. Machinist’s Song by Lesbia Harford
  10. “Art says things that history cannot”: Beatriz González in De Pont Museum

Or see the index

All categories

  1. AFRICAN AMERICAN LITERATURE (12)
  2. AUDIO, CINEMA, RADIO & TV (217)
  3. DANCE & PERFORMANCE (60)
  4. DICTIONARY OF IDEAS (180)
  5. EXHIBITION – art, art history, photos, paintings, drawings, sculpture, ready-mades, video, performing arts, collages, gallery, etc. (1,515)
  6. FICTION & NON-FICTION – books, booklovers, lit. history, biography, essays, translations, short stories, columns, literature: celtic, beat, travesty, war, dada & de stijl, drugs, dead poets (3,863)
  7. FLEURSDUMAL POETRY LIBRARY – classic, modern, experimental & visual & sound poetry, poetry in translation, city poets, poetry archive, pre-raphaelites, editor's choice, etc. (4,774)
  8. LITERARY NEWS & EVENTS – art & literature news, in memoriam, festivals, city-poets, writers in Residence (1,615)
  9. MONTAIGNE (110)
  10. MUSEUM OF LOST CONCEPTS – invisible poetry, conceptual writing, spurensicherung (54)
  11. MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY – department of ravens & crows, birds of prey, riding a zebra, spring, summer, autumn, winter (184)
  12. MUSEUM OF PUBLIC PROTEST (143)
  13. MUSIC (222)
  14. NATIVE AMERICAN LIBRARY (4)
  15. PRESS & PUBLISHING (91)
  16. REPRESSION OF WRITERS, JOURNALISTS & ARTISTS (112)
  17. STORY ARCHIVE – olv van de veestraat, reading room, tales for fellow citizens (17)
  18. STREET POETRY (46)
  19. THEATRE (186)
  20. TOMBEAU DE LA JEUNESSE – early death: writers, poets & artists who died young (356)
  21. ULTIMATE LIBRARY – danse macabre, ex libris, grimm & co, fairy tales, art of reading, tales of mystery & imagination, sherlock holmes theatre, erotic poetry, ideal women (229)
  22. WAR & PEACE (127)
  23. WESTERN FICTION & NON-FICTION (22)
  24. · (2)

Or see the index



  1. Subscribe to new material: RSS

Gladys Cromwell: The Gardener

The Gardener

At evening, I have seen him wander in
And out hetween the hedges ;
On the moss he treads, where shadows spin
A misty web. He skirts the edges
Indistinct of heliotrope and jessamine.

I wonder what he does, studious
And furtive in the gloom.
Is he covering the tremulous
Young plants that have no spreading bloom
When night is cool, to keep them joung and
luminous?

Or is he mutely speculating there
Upon the flowers themselves ;
His love observing them through the veiled air
As plain as when he weeds and delves
At noon, but with more secret and more wistful
care?

I call the garden mine. This votary
Who loves it makes it his ;
A poet owns his legend. If I were
To ask the garden whose it is.
It would reply : “My master is this gardener.”

Cromwell, Gladys
[1885-1919]
The Gardener
(Poem)

• fleursdumal.nl magazine

More in: Archive C-D, Archive C-D, Cromwell, Gladys, Gladys Cromwell

Previous and Next Entry

« | »

Thank you for reading Fleurs du Mal - magazine for art & literature