The Valley-Lily
Take , O Gardener, to the maiden
In whose praise the harp I string,
Take at dawn a basket laden
With the loveliest blooms of spring
Let no orange-flowers suggesting
Altar, priest, or ring be there,
But sweet valley-lilies, cresting
Roses than her cheek less fair;
Seeing which, her bird with mellow
Throat shall pipe a roundelay,
And her eyelids from her pillow
Open on a happy day,
Happier should its waning prove her
Mindful of the tender stress
That impels my soul to love her,
Though that love she never bless.
In whose praise the harp I string,
Take at dawn a basket laden
With the loveliest blooms of spring
Let no orange-flowers suggesting
Altar, priest, or ring be there,
But sweet valley-lilies, cresting
Roses than her cheek less fair;
Seeing which, her bird with mellow
Throat shall pipe a roundelay,
And her eyelids from her pillow
Open on a happy day,
Happier should its waning prove her
Mindful of the tender stress
That impels my soul to love her,
Though that love she never bless.
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