A Boutonnière
A DEWY fragrance drifts at times
Across my willing senses,
And leads the rillet of my rhymes
From city gutters, gusts, and grimes
To lowland lields and fences.
Across my willing senses,
And leads the rillet of my rhymes
From city gutters, gusts, and grimes
To lowland lields and fences.
I seem to see, as I inhale
This perfume faint and fleeting,
Green hillsides sloping to a vale,
Whose leafy shadows screen the pale
Wood-flowers from noonday’s greeting.
This perfume faint and fleeting,
Green hillsides sloping to a vale,
Whose leafy shadows screen the pale
Wood-flowers from noonday’s greeting.
I hear the song—the sweet heartache —
Of just a pair of thrushes ;
And hear, half dreaming, half awake,
The ripple of a streamlet break
Their momentary hushes.
Of just a pair of thrushes ;
And hear, half dreaming, half awake,
The ripple of a streamlet break
Their momentary hushes.
And why, dear heart, do I to-day.
Hemmed in by court and alley,
Seem lost in haunts of faun and fay ?
Look! — on my coat I’ve pinned your spray
Of lilies-of-the-valley.
Hemmed in by court and alley,
Seem lost in haunts of faun and fay ?
Look! — on my coat I’ve pinned your spray
Of lilies-of-the-valley.
Charles Henry Lüders.