Easter holidays

 
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Poems - Easter Poems, Christian Poems, Religious Poems, Easter Poetry, free poems, Poems for Easter, Eggs Poems, Bunny & Rabbit Poem

Palm Sunday, © by Henry Vaughan E-mail

Palm Sunday, © by Henry Vaughan

Hark! how the children shrill and high
Hosanna cry,
Their joys provoke the distant sky,
Where thrones and sersaphims reply,
And their own angels shine and sing
In a bright ring:
Such young, sweet mirth
Makes heaven and earth
Join in a joyful symphony.

 
The Cherry-Tree Carol, Traditional English E-mail

The Cherry-Tree Carol, Traditional English

Joseph was an old man,
And an old man was he,
And he married Mary,
The Queen of Galilee.

Joseph and Mary walked
Through an orchard good,
Where was cherries and berries,
As red as any blood.

Joseph and Mary walked
Through an orchard green,
Where was berries and cherries,
As thick as might be seen.

O then bespoke Mary,
So meek and so mild;
"Pluck me one cherry, Joseph,
For I am with child."

O then bepoke Jospeh
With words most unkind:
"Let him pluck thee a cherry
That brought thee with child."

O then bespoke the babe,
Within his mother's womb:
"Bow down then the tallest tree,
For my mother to have some."

Then bowed down the highest tree
Unto his mother's hand;
Then she cried: "see, Joseph,
I have cherries at command."

O then bespake Joseph:
"I have done Mary wrong;
But cheer up, my dearest,
And be not cast down."

Then Mary plucked a cherry,
As red as the blood,
Then Mary went home
With her heavy load.

Then Mary took her babe,
And sat him on her knee,
Saying: "My dear son, tell me
What this world will be."

"O I shall be as dead, mother,
As the stones in the wall;
O the stones in the streets, mother,
Shall mourn for me all.

"Upon Easter-day, mother,
My uprising shall be;
O the subn and the moon, mother,
Shall both rise with me."

 
The Legend of the Dogwood Tree E-mail

The Legend of the Dogwood Tree

When Christ was on earth,
The dogwood grew to a
Towering size with lovely hue.
Its branches were strong and interwoven
And for Christ's cross
Its timbers were chosen.
Being distressed at the use of this wood,
Christ made a promise
Which still holds good:

"Not ever again shall the dogwood grow
To be large enough for such a tree,
And so slender and twisted
It shall always be with cross-shaped Blossoms for all to see.
The petals shall have bloodstains
Marked in brown and in the
Blossom's center a thorny crown.
All who see it will think of Me,
Nailed to a cross from the dogwood tree.
Protected and cherished this tree shall be
A reflection to all of my agony."

 
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Happy Easter, Easter Holidays