
Early Spring
This is a poetry collection from 1920 that captures the exact moment winter surrenders. Fay Inchfawn writes with delicate precision about the first signs of renewal - crocuses pushing through frost, birds returning, light lasting longer each day. These aren't sweeping odes to spring but small, intimate observations: the specific quality of March sunlight, the way snowdrops appear before anyone's watching. Written in the optimistic aftermath of World War I, the collection carries a quiet joy in witnessing the earth's annual rebirth. The verses are accessible, unpretentious, rooted in the English countryside the author knew intimately. For readers who find solace in seasonal literature or who want poetry that doesn't demand interpretation before it moves them.
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Annie Coleman Rothenberg, Chip, Curtis Brown, Dilini Jayasinghe +4 more












![Birds and Nature, Vol. 12 No. 1 [June 1902]illustrated by Color Photography](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fd3b2n8gj62qnwr.cloudfront.net%2FCOVERS%2Fgutenberg_covers75k%2Febook-47881.png&w=3840&q=75)

