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Victor Hugo

CORNFLOWERS.

("Tandis que l’etoile inodore.")

[XXXII.]

While bright but scentless azure stars
  Be-gem the golden corn,
And spangle with their skyey tint
  The furrows not yet shorn;
While still the pure white tufts of May
  Ape each a snowy ball,—­
Away, ye merry maids, and haste
  To gather ere they fall!

Nowhere the sun of Spain outshines
  Upon a fairer town
Than Penafiel, or endows
  More richly farming clown;
Nowhere a broader square reflects
  Such brilliant mansions, tall,—­
Away, ye merry maids, etc.

Nowhere a statelier abbey rears
  Dome huger o’er a shrine,
Though seek ye from old Rome itself
  To even Seville fine. 
Here countless pilgrims come to pray
 And promenade the Mall,—­
Away, ye merry maids, etc.

Where glide the girls more joyfully
  Than ours who dance at dusk,
With roses white upon their brows,
  With waists that scorn the busk? 
Mantillas elsewhere hide dull eyes—­
  Compared with these, how small! 
Away, ye merry maids, etc.

A blossom in a city lane,
  Alizia was our pride,
And oft the blundering bee, deceived,
  Came buzzing to her side—­
But, oh! for one that felt the sting,
  And found, ’neath honey, gall—­
Away, ye merry maids, etc.

Young, haughty, from still hotter lands,
  A stranger hither came—­
Was he a Moor or African,
  Or Murcian known to fame? 
None knew—­least, she—­or false or true,
  The name by which to call. 
Away, ye merry maids, etc.

Alizia asked not his degree,
  She saw him but as Love,
And through Xarama’s vale they strayed,
  And tarried in the grove,—­
Oh! curses on that fatal eve,
  And on that leafy hall! 
Away, ye merry maids, etc.

The darkened city breathed no more;
  The moon was mantled long,
Till towers thrust the cloudy cloak
  Upon the steeples’ throng;
The crossway Christ, in ivy draped,
  Shrank, grieving, ’neath the pall,—­
Away, ye merry maids, etc.

But while, alone, they kept the shade,
  The other dark-eyed dears
Were murmuring on the stifling air
  Their jealous threats and fears;
Alizia was so blamed, that time,
  Unheeded rang the call: 
Away, ye merry maids, etc.

Although, above, the hawk describes
  The circle round the lark,
It sleeps, unconscious, and our lass
  Had eyes but for her spark—­
A spark?—­a sun!  ’Twas Juan, King! 
  Who wears our coronal,—­
Away, ye merry maids, etc.

A love so far above one’s state
  Ends sadly.  Came a black
And guarded palanquin to bear
  The girl that ne’er comes back;
By royal writ, some nunnery
  Still shields her from us all
Away, ye merry maids, and haste
  To gather ere they fall!

Copyrights
Poems from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.

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