Page:Twilight Hours (1868).djvu/61

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.
UNDER THE MULBERRY TREE.
17

Softly the twilight is falling, is falling,
Over the mountain and over the lea ;
Softly the cuckoo is calling, is calling,
" Oh my love, Oh my love, over the sea !
Cu-coo, cu-coo."
Slowly the notes, in their infinite longing,
Drop, as the lily leaves drop on the stream ;
Swiftly the fairies rise, thronging and thronging,
As the last tones come on daylight's last gleam,
" Cu-coo, cu-coo. 1 '
Silently, silently, homeward together,
Each with his burden of sweetness and pain ;
Wondering, wondering, under what weather
Mulberry berries shall bring us again
To woo, to woo.