Elizabeth

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_May 1, 1891_.

  I.

  Elizabeth!  Elizabeth!
  The first May-morning whispereth
  Thy gentle name in every breeze
  That lispeth through the young-leaved trees,
  New raimented in white and green
  Of bloom and leaf to crown thee queen;--
  And, as in odorous chorus, all
  The orchard-blossoms sweetly call
  Even as a singing voice that saith
  Elizabeth!  Elizabeth!

  II.

  Elizabeth!  Lo, lily-fair,
  In deep, cool shadows of thy hair,
  Thy face maintaineth its repose.--
  Is it, O sister of the rose,
  So better, sweeter, blooming thus
  Than in this briery world with us?--
  Where frost o'ertaketh, and the breath
  Of biting winter harrieth
  With sleeted rains and blighting snows
  All fairest blooms--Elizabeth!

  III.

  Nay, then!--So reign, Elizabeth,
  Crowned, in thy May-day realm of death!
  Put forth the scepter of thy love
  In every star-tipped blossom of
  The grassy dais of thy throne!
  Sadder are we, thus left alone,
  But gladder they that thrill to see
  Thy mother's rapture, greeting thee.
  Bereaved are we by life--not death--
  Elizabeth!  Elizabeth!

© James Whitcomb Riley