Poems (Linn)/May
Appearance
For works with similar titles, see May.
MAY.
A WHITE shower falls from the apple tree, Good-bye, good-bye, sweet May!I will not mourn at beauty lost, For there comes as fair a day;But such a wealth of sweets is thine, Such blooms of flower and spray,We can but sigh that gaining June, We still must lose our May.
Only for once in the whole long year Are the trees so robed in bloom;Only for once the lilac flowers Yield up such rare perfume;Only for once the birds sing forth A melody so gay;The sweetest promise of the year Comes with the flowers of May.
We dream of these days through the winter long, When dreary lies the snow,And picture forth what joys were ours In the Mays of long ago; But when the time brings forth the bloom From the buds of leaf and spray,We find our loveliest dreams were vain To show the sweets of May.
And waking morn, with golden sun, Is filled with gladdest sound,The chords of music seem to thrill Along the very ground,For insect life awakes and moves To join the roundelayThat breaks along the happy earth In the fair time of May.
Our hearts forget from year to year How pink the apple bloom,We cannot carry in our mind Such wealth of rich perfume;At every step we feel surprise At the glory of the day,And wonder if the world has been As fair in every May.
But time has in its bosom much To give for our delight.There is a promise in the flower So beautiful and white. The green fields mean a fair, rich yield When spring has passed away,And the birds will know a deeper joy Than comes to them in May.
Fall down, fall down, oh! shower of white And make the ground like snow,For underneath those petals fair The fruit is hid, I know.And hasten on, oh! golden sun, There's joy with every day.Our world would not be half as rich If life could be all May.