Page:Troubadour.pdf/242

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238
THE TROUBADOUR.


    To some lovely solitude,
    Where the nightingale's young brood
    Lives amid the shrine of leaves,
    Which the wild rose round them weaves,
    And my dwelling shall be made
    Underneath the beech-tree's shade.
    Twining ivy for the walls
    Over which the jasmine falls,
    Like a tapestry work'd with gold
    And pearls around each emerald fold:
    And my couches shall be set
    With the purple violet,
    And the white ones too, inside
    Each a blush to suit a bride.
    That flower which of all that live,
    Lovers, should be those who give,