I THERE sits a bird on yonder tree, More fond than Cushat Dove; There sits a bird on yonder tree, And sings to me of love. Oh! stoop thee from thine eyrie down. And nestle thee near my heart, For the moments fly, And the hour is nigh, When thou and I must part, My love! When thou and I must part. II In yonder covert lurks a Fawn, The pride of the sylvan scene; In yonder covert lurks a Fawn, And I am his only queen; Oh! bound from thy secret lair, For the sun is below the west; Nor mortal eye May our meeting spy, For all are closed in rest, My love! Each eye is closed in rest. III Oh! sweet is the breath of morn, When the sun's first beams appear; Oh! sweet is the shepherd's strain, When it dies on the list'ning ear; And sweet the soft voice which speaks The Wanderer's welcome home; But sweeter far By yon pale mild star, With our true Love thus to roam, My dear! With our own true Love to roam! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SHUT OUT THAT MOON by THOMAS HARDY DISCONTENTS IN DEVON by ROBERT HERRICK THE HARLOT'S HOUSE by OSCAR WILDE A SPRING CAROL by ALFRED AUSTIN THE KNITTING by MARGARET BARBER ECHOES OF SPRING: 10 by MATHILDE BLIND |