“March”

Along the fence the crocus blossoms lift
        Their slender cups of blue, and pink, and snow;
        The brave white daisies, too, are all ablow;
Across the air the tufts of willow sift,
And settle into many a fluffy drift.
        Where Whatcom’s waters leap the rocks, and flow
        Beneath the bridge, wild currant blossoms glow
Like soft, pink globes of flame. In the brook’s rift
        The reeds bend down to let the waves slip through
        With low, sweet, faltering laughter. Blue, pale blue,
The curving sky—and deeper blue the sea;
        And crimson salmon-berry bells are here . . . . . 
        Hey, March! I like thy laughter shrill and free—
Thou bold, sweet fearless daughter of the year!

 
“March” printed in the Bellingham Reveille. Clipping courtesy of the Ella Higginson Papers, Center for Pacific Northwest Studies, Heritage Resources, Western Washington University, Bellingham Washington.