ROSES red for the fair young head to weave a crown, Let them be half blown, For a rose in June it will fade too soon to gold and brown. For thee my own The fairest blossoms in all love's land, for that small hot hand, And a bird to sing all the sweet day through, Lest fear should wake in the heart of you, And I hear my own heart's beating; Wild roses red for the fair gold head, Love in my arms lies sleeping. Lilies fair for the wind-blown hair, It were better so Than a blossom dead, And a rose's thorn; but the fresh glad morn brings breath of snow. Hath summer fled? Hath winter come when I dreamt it spring? Is my sweet bird dead that he does not sing? I hear but my heart's sad weeping. Loose and cold is thy soft hands' hold; Love in my arms lies sleeping. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...WILLIE BREW'D A PECK O' MAUT by ROBERT BURNS THE CAVALIER'S SONG by WILLIAM MOTHERWELL LINES TO A BEAUTIFUL AND BUS-RIDING LADY by FRANKLIN PIERCE ADAMS THE MESSIAH by MABEL WARREN ARNOLD A WINTER DAY by ALBERT LINDLEY BEANE AFTERWARDS by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN TRITON ESURIENS by THOMAS EDWARD BROWN |