SONGS OF THE POPPY HARVEST

I

How like to the poppy seed is this world,

It blossoms, it blossoms to-day.

To-morrow a stormy tempest blows

And the flower has vanished away.

O sad for the forests and willow-trees

That hark to the nightingales:

O woe for the house of the widow young

When the voice of her husband fails!

O sad for the forests and willow trees

When no nightingales awake

The rest of the little singing birds

As the rays of the morning break!

And sadder still is the quiet house

Where the lonely widow sleeps:

Where the little children none shall rouse

Since the grave their father keeps.

II

How sad, O my Mother, how sad

To think of the roses blown by the wind

And the petals all swept away!

How sad, O my Mother, how sad

For the war-horse in battle array!

But sadder my heart for the soldier young

Who must go for those three long years:

Must go at the call of his king!