BALLADE OF JUNE

LILACS glow, and jasmines climb,

Larks are loud the livelong day.

O the golden summer-prime!

June takes up the sceptre of May,

And the land beneath her sway

Glows, a dream of flowerful closes,

And the very wind’s at play

With Sir Love among the roses.

Lights and shadows in the lime

Meet in exquisite disarray.

Hark! the rich recurrent rhyme

Of the blackbird’s roundelay!

Where he carols, frank and gay,

Fancy no more glooms or proses;

Joyously she flits away

With Sir Love among the roses.

O the cool sea’s slumbrous chime!

O the links that beach the bay,

Tricked with meadow-sweet and thyme,

Where the brown bees murmur and stray!

Lush the hedgerows, ripe the hay!

Many a maiden, binding posies,

Finds herself at Yea-and-Nay

With Sir Love among the roses.