Spring Bereaved I
William Henry Drummond
That zephyr every year So soon was heard to sigh in forests here, It was for her: that wrapp’d in gowns of green Meads were so early seen, That in the saddest months oft sung the merles, It was for her; for her trees dropp’d forth pearls. That proud and stately courts Did envy those our shades and calm resorts, It was for her; and she is gone, O woe! Woods cut again do grow, Bud doth the rose and daisy, winter done; But we, once dead, no more do see the sun.
Next 10 Poems
- William Henry Drummond : Spring Bereaved Ii
- William Henry Drummond : Spring Bereaved Iii
- William Henry Drummond : Summons To Love
- William Henry Drummond : This Life Which Seems So Fair
- William Henry Drummond : To His Lute
- William Henry Drummond : To The Nightingale
- John Dryden : A Song For Saint Cecilia's Day, 1687
- John Dryden : A Song For St. Cecilia's Day, 1687
- John Dryden : A Song From The Italian
- John Dryden : A Song From The Italian: Limberham, Or, The Kind Keeper
Previous 10 Poems
- William Henry Drummond : Saint John Baptist
- William Henry Drummond : Madrigal
- William Henry Drummond : Invocation
- William Henry Drummond : Inexorable
- William Henry Drummond : Her Passing
- William Henry Drummond : Doth Then The World Go Thus?
- William Henry Drummond : Change Should Breed Change
- William Henry Drummond : A Lament
- Michael Drayton : To The Virginian Voyage
- Michael Drayton : To The Reader Of These Sonnets