ELIZABETH, alack, Elizabeth! Your lovely lilies blow, Slim, love, still, love, beside the echoing stair. The bees have found them out. Row after row Your pinks, those little blossoms with a breath Blown from the east, and out the spice-trees there, Nod up the paths; and roses white as death, And roses red as love, grow everywhere; For June is at the door. Alack, alack, alack, Elizabeth! Sweeter than June, why do you come no more? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...DEPARTURE IN THE DARK by CECIL DAY LEWIS IN MEMORIAM A.H.H.: 1 by ALFRED TENNYSON THE WHITE BIRDS by WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS A 'FIRST IMPRESSION': TOKYO by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN DEATHLESS LOVE by HARRY RANDOLPH BLYTHE IN THE DARK by ABBIE FARWELL BROWN VISTAS OF LABOR: 2. THE MINER by RICHARD EUGENE BURTON |