University of Virginia Library

OUR LADY OF THE LILIES.

Our Lady of the lilies—
The valley-lilies fair!
Her brow was pure as any babe's,
And silvery-white her hair.
The snows of ninety winters
Had fallen upon her head;
Within her clear, benignant eyes
A history sweet you read.
She walked among the flowers
That her own hands had sown;
With lilies-of-the-valley white
Her paths were overgrown.
Through the old, grassy garden
Year after year they stole;
Their fragrance seemed the very breath
Of our dear Lady's soul.

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She gave away her lilies
Freely as wild birds sing;
They bore to sick and lonely ones
The first glad hint of spring.
Our Lady of the lilies
Loved other blossoms, too;
She was our Sweet-Pea Grandmamma,—
The dearest flower she knew.
With earliest heats of summer
Came forth the sweet-pea's blush,
Pink as the soft tint of her cheek,
Or sunset's last, faint flush.
And, clipping bud and tendril
In morning's dewiest hours,
Her thoughts on lovely errands ran:—
“Now, who shall have my flowers?”
Surely her love was in them,
Like sun and dew and air;
For sweet-peas wonderful as hers
Blossomed not anywhere.
They crowded through the fence-rail,
They sprang to meet her touch,
All winged and waiting for a flight:
Where shall we now find such?
And oh! what fairer blossoms
Can grow around her feet,
In that new country where she walks,
Within heaven's climate sweet?
I think they must have brought her
The dear, old-fashioned flowers,
Before her heart felt quite at home
Even in the angels' bowers.
Our Lady of the lilies
Even there her name may be;
While here fond memories cling to her
As Grandmamma Sweet-Pea.