I. UNDER the lime-tree, on the daisied ground, Two that I know of made their bed; There you may see, heaped and scattered round, Grass and blossoms, broken and shed, All in a thicket down in the dale; Tandaradei Sweetly sang the nightingale. II. Ere I set foot in the meadow, already Some one was waiting for somebody; There was a meetingO gracious Lady! There is no pleasure again for me. Thousands of kisses there he took, Tandaradei See my lips, how red they look! III. Leaf and blossom he had pulled and piled For a couch, a green one, soft and high; And many a one hath gazed and smiled, Passing the bower and pressed grass by; And the roses crushed hath seen, Tandaradei Where I laid my head between. IV. In this love passage, if any one had been there, How sad and shamed should I be! But what were we a-doing alone among the green there, No soul shall ever know except my love and me, And the little nightingale. Tandaradei She, I think, will tell no tale. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE CHRONICLE; A BALLAD by ABRAHAM COWLEY WINTER'S EVENING HYMN TO MY FIRE by JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL EVEN SO by DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI TO ALISON CUNNINGHAM; FROM HER BOY by ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON SONG OF THE OPEN ROAD by WALT WHITMAN WHAT THE BIRDS SAID by JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER |