HERBS OF GRACE.

VI.

ROSEMARY.

Whenas on summer days I see

That sacred herb, the Rosemary,

The which, since once Our Lady threw

Upon its flow'rs her robe of blue,

Has never shown them white again,

But still in blue doth dress them—

Then, oh, then

I think upon old friends and bless them.

And when beside my winter fire

I feel its fragrant leaves suspire,

Hung from my hearth-beam on a hook,

Or laid within a quiet book

There to awake dear ghosts of men

When pages ope that press them—

Then, oh, then

I think upon old friends and bless them.

The gentle Rosemary, I wis,

Is Friendship's herb and Memory's.

Ah, ye whom this small herb of grace

Brings back, yet brings not face to face,

Yea, all who read these lines I pen,

Would ye for truth confess them?

Then, oh, then

Think upon old friends and bless them.