Thou speak'st of the distant the lost-the dear; Thine azure is dimmed by a grief-fraught tear; Yet I will not be sad, for thou tellest to me Of returning Spring and returning glee. THE MAY MORN BOUQUET. Come let us goe, while we are in our prime, And some have wept, and woo'd, and plighted troth, Many a green gown has been given, Many a kiss, both odde and even; Many a glance too has been sent, From out the eye, Love's firmament. Then while time serves, and we are but decaying, Come, my Corinna, come, let's goe a Maying. ROBERT HERRICK. DORA alone. OH! the morn is bright, the sky is blue, The sun is shining cheery; And the may-pole's dressed-but where are you, My Lubin-where's my dearie? I've put on all my finest things, (This kerchief looks so natty!) My ears have now as handsome rings E I wonder who'll be chosen queen, I know who'd like to play it; There's none so tall as me, I ween, Nor prettier-tho' I say it. And Lubin always says I tread As stately as a Venus, When I've one milk-pail on my head, And another's held between us. [Enter LUBIN, &c. 'Long looked for, come at last,' they say I've wanted you for hours; And now you have not a bouquet! Here, take some garden-flowers. LUBIN. "No, Dora, none of these for me, And violets, too-for both, I see, And Marion may mate her pale To choose the daffodilly. The honeysuckle give to Kate, Whoever wins her for a mate, Will win both wealth and blessing. Narcissus take to Roland Hay, Yon bramble fling to Rachel Rann, Both darlings-they're delightful. Sweet William flies to blushing Sue, The green is swept the fiddler's come, And lads, to lasses glancing (While flourishes sound on the drum), Are eager to be dancing. And Lubin now, without remorse, His bright blue vest's adorning With a gay bunch of yellow Gorse; While all the maids are scorning Such " trumpery and queer" bouquet, Young faces gather'd near him. LUBIN'S SONG. FAIR maidens, I'll sing you a song; I'll tell you the bonny wild flower, Whose blossoms so yellow, and branches so long, It clings to the crag, and it clothes the wild hill; 'Tis the bonny bright GORSE, that gleams cheerily forth, Like sunlight e'er lingering here, In the verdure of Spring, and when Summer on earth Has called all the fairest of blossoms to birth, As a crown for the noon of the year. When the "fall of the leaf" in the forest is heard, |