The Poetical Works of Eliza Cook | ||
The Song of June.
Oh! come with me, whoever ye be,
Come from the palace, and come from the cot;
The strong and the hale—the poor and the pale—
Ah! sad is the spirit that follows me not.
Come from the palace, and come from the cot;
The strong and the hale—the poor and the pale—
Ah! sad is the spirit that follows me not.
Old December lighted his pyre,
And beckoned ye in to the altar-blaze;
He hung up his mistletoe over the fire,
And pressed soft lips upon Christmas days.
And beckoned ye in to the altar-blaze;
He hung up his mistletoe over the fire,
And pressed soft lips upon Christmas days.
Ye welcomed him with his eyes so dim,
But I know ye have more love for me,
When I wander about, and whistle ye out
With my blackbird pipers in every tree.
But I know ye have more love for me,
When I wander about, and whistle ye out
With my blackbird pipers in every tree.
Oh! come from the town, and let us go down
To the rivulet's mossy and osiered brink;
'Tis pleasant to note the lily queen float;
The gadfly skim, and the dappled kine drink.
To the rivulet's mossy and osiered brink;
'Tis pleasant to note the lily queen float;
The gadfly skim, and the dappled kine drink.
Oh! let us away, where the ringdoves play,
By the skirts of the wood in the peaceful shade;
And there we can count the squirrels that mount,
And the flocks that browse on the distant glade.
By the skirts of the wood in the peaceful shade;
And there we can count the squirrels that mount,
And the flocks that browse on the distant glade.
And if we should stay till the farewell of day,
Its parting shall be with such lingering smile,
That the western light, as it greeteth the night,
Will be caught by the eastern ray peeping the while.
Its parting shall be with such lingering smile,
That the western light, as it greeteth the night,
Will be caught by the eastern ray peeping the while.
Little ones come, with your chattering hum,
And the bee and the bird will be jealous full soon;
For no music is heard like the echoing word
Of a child, as it treads 'mid the flowers of June.
And the bee and the bird will be jealous full soon;
For no music is heard like the echoing word
Of a child, as it treads 'mid the flowers of June.
455
Ye who are born to be weary and worn
With labour or sorrow, with passion or pain,
Come out for an hour, there's balm in my bower,
To lighten and burnish your tear-rusted chain.
With labour or sorrow, with passion or pain,
Come out for an hour, there's balm in my bower,
To lighten and burnish your tear-rusted chain.
Oh! come with me, wherever you be,
And Beauty and Love on your spirits shall fall;
On the rich and the hale, the poor and the pale,
For Lady June scatters her joys for all.
And Beauty and Love on your spirits shall fall;
On the rich and the hale, the poor and the pale,
For Lady June scatters her joys for all.
The Poetical Works of Eliza Cook | ||