Oscar Wilde

Le Jardin Des Tuileries

Le Jardin Des Tuileries - meaning Summary

Winter Children, Imagined Spring

The speaker watches children playing in the cold winter air of the Tuileries, their energy turning a harsh scene into one of warmth and motion. He notes their mimic games by the kiosk and the fountain, their climbing of a bare tree, and responds with affectionate wishfulness: if he were the tree he would break into bloom for their sake. The poem contrasts seasonal bleakness with youthful vitality and gentle empathy.

Read Complete Analyses

This winter air is keen and cold, And keen and cold this winter sun, But round my chair the children run Like little things of dancing gold. Sometimes about the painted kiosk The mimic soldiers strut and stride, Sometimes the blue-eyed brigands hide In the bleak tangles of the bosk. And sometimes, while the old nurse cons Her book, they steal across the square, And launch their paper navies where Huge Triton writhes in greenish bronze. And now in mimic flight they flee, And now they rush, a boisterous band - And, tiny hand on tiny hand, Climb up the black and leafless tree. Ah! cruel tree! if I were you, And children climbed me, for their sake Though it be winter I would break Into spring blossoms white and blue!

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