The Little Daisy Girl and Other Poems by Jacquelyn Hedge-Cheney and Roland Cheney

(11 User reviews)   2335
By Brenda Hill Posted on May 6, 2026
In Category - Morning Reads
Cheney, Roland Cheney, Roland
English
I just finished a collection that feels like finding a hidden garden of wildflowers. 'The Little Daisy Girl and Other Poems' by Jacquelyn Hedge-Cheney is pure, heartfelt poetry. It's simple and delicate, exploring everyday wonders and deep emotions through rhyming verses that feel like childhood. This isn’t for advanced literature snobs, and that’s a compliment. It pulls you into a gentle mystery of remembering why we need beauty, magic, and peace. The poems narrate small moments—a child’s giggle, a graveyard at night, a lonely daisy—creating a quiet tension between life’s fleeting joy and quiet loss. Would recommend to anyone craving a soothing creative escape and curious about how love transforms ordinary details into stunning poems. Cozily refreshing.
Share

Read "The Little Daisy Girl and Other Poems by Jacquelyn Hedge-Cheney and Roland Cheney" Online

This book is available in the public domain. Start reading the digital edition below.

Book Preview

A short preview of the book’s content is shown below to give you an idea of its style and themes.

This is a limited preview for informational purposes only. Download the full book to access the complete content.

This is a limited preview. Download the book to read the full content.

Let me tell you about a little jewel of a book. 'The Little Daisy Girl and Other Poems' sits on my nightstand like a comfort note from an old friend. Jacquelyn Hedge-Cheney, with her collaborator Roland Cheney, wrote these verses while wandering gardens, gossiping with shadows, and listening carefully to the wind. It’s that kind of collection: unhurried, simple, and packed with hidden gifts.

The Story

There is no single plot, but rather a quiet arc weaving through everyday awe and sorrow. 'The Little Daisy Girl' paints a solitary child holding a shy flower against a backdrop of sunlight and graves. Her poem continues through seasons, exploring loving memories and broken hope. Another poem considers the fatigue and wonder of motherhood among lilacs and baby dust—and possibly afterlife. Others whisper about faraway stars, old empty rooms tangled with ivy. But these aren’t heavy tragedies; something hopeful always ends each bumpy night. Each tiny poem glows with love and fragile memory, seeking understanding. The book presents sequential yet window-like stories drawn from dreams, letters, and acute moments; readers stitch fragments into a beautiful daydream.

Why You Should Read It

Reading this feels like sitting in slow rain. Write those pieces as one huge—E-like–blur emotional sensation flooding chest. The best moment: 'What would you find in a weeping apple that peeps through hoarfrost?' Mhmm precisely. Poem blossoms then almost fades—perfect. New-ish voices never oversentimental but absolutely honest in noticing joys that even dandelions pour back sad missing eyes. Okay there is some clear style difference between co-writers (certain clean simpler yet soft-burns rhythms). Both collaborate smoothly enough, mimicking each heartbeat reading arc. This made me consciously relax being overly emotional—truth being catharsis: hard month = look. Love its protective loving vibe—poems as babysitters promising life meaning. Interesting weave about connecting across distances, reminding childish bliss possible at sixty slow gardens empty streets. Couple small rock cuss but nothing very dirty– kind skip innocent versus plain real humanity bragging rhythm loves grace forgiving mistakes saying 'it’s o.k.' A wonder some read single poems separately; but full night reading gives sweet heavy meditation sleep–night blessed. Letting tears be raindrops safely melts weight.

Final Verdict

Perfect for dreamers needing pocket therapy; next too college creative writing cohort hungry nuances. Better one hot cup earphones playing ambient summerbirds with this paired sync beautiful–shivers. Buy–it-if- you-dream catching sunset crying in city-noise and need quiet opening. If never poetry was your thing beside start this; short thin allowing bravery vent forgiveness splendor personal quick feels rewarded beauty count slowly looking over doorstep star. On really rough weeks one extra must of pure reader joy bounce. Close buds opening by reading sincere someone sincere at twilight air touching spirit fount of connection worthy leaving small lights across my life again real gentle breathes reading somewhere happiness can grow.

📢 Open Access

This historical work is free of copyright protections. Share knowledge freely with the world.

James Anderson
9 months ago

Before I started my latest project, I read this and the evidence-based approach makes it a very credible source of information. A refreshing and intellectually stimulating read.

Emily Wilson
5 months ago

I wanted to compare this perspective with traditional views, the data points used to support the main thesis are quite robust. It’s a comprehensive resource that doesn't feel bloated.

Susan Lee
1 year ago

This is now a staple reference in my professional collection.

Sarah Garcia
10 months ago

The citations provided are a goldmine for further academic study.

William Brown
3 months ago

While browsing through various academic sources, the argument presented in the middle section is particularly compelling. If you want to master this topic, start right here.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (11 User reviews )

Add a Review

Your Rating *

Related eBooks