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Poems at Home and Abroad

By the Revd. H. D. Rawnsley

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A Spring Song at the Lakes
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
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38

A Spring Song at the Lakes

From o'er the winter-rusted fell,
From out the valleys purple-blue,
There comes the Queen we love so well
To her appointment true.
Not yet the music of her march
Has filled the garden-grove with song,
But rosy birch and yellow larch
Have felt her pass along.
She comes in mossy kirtle drest,
The first faint daisies in her hand,
The snowdrop glitters at her breast,
She bears an osier wand.
But neither moss nor flowerets fair
Avail to give us heart of grace,
The sun shines golden in her hair,
And triumphs in her face.