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قراءة كتاب The Violet Book
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اللغة: English
الصفحة رقم: 2
violet.
—EDMUND SPENSER.
Tell me, this sweet morn,
Tell me all you know,—
Tell me, was I born?
Tell me, did I grow?
Fell I from the blue
Like a drop of rain,
Then, as violets do,
Blossomed up again?
—ROBERT BUCHANAN.
The violet loves the sunny bank,
The cowslip loves the lea,
The scarlet creeper loves the elm;
But I love—thee.
—BAYARD TAYLOR.
Your name pronounced brings to my heart
A feeling like the violet’s breath.
—COVENTRY PATMORE.
Be other brows by pleasure’s wreath
Or glory’s coronal oppressed,
To me the humblest flower seems best,
Some sweet wild bloom with dews still wet.
So, Love, but kiss a violet—
O, Love, but kiss a violet—
And fling it to my breast!
—GRACE GREENWOOD.
The silent, soft and humble heart
In the violet’s hidden sweetness breathes.
—JAMES G. PERCIVAL.
Perchance the violets o’er my dust
Will half betray their buried trust,
And say, their blue eyes full of dew,
“She loved you better than you knew.”
—ELIZABETH AKERS ALLEN.
Sure thou didst flourish once! and many springs,
Many bright mornings, much dew, many showers
Passed o’er thy head; many light hearts and wings,
Which now are dead, lodged in thy living bowers.
And still a new succession sings and flies;
Fresh groves grow up, and their green branches shoot
Towards the old and still enduring skies;
While the low violet thrives at their root.
—HENRY VAUGHAN.
Blue eyes
Whose sleepy lid like snow on violets lies.
—THOMAS MOORE.
Little maid, a violet
Is knocking at your door,
Eagerly its message sweet
Repeating o’er and o’er:
“Some one sent me with his love,—
Take me, I implore!”
—ANONYMOUS.
Where fall the tears of love the rose appears,
And where the ground is bright with friendship’s tears,
Forget-me-not, and violets, heavenly blue,
Spring, glittering with the cheerful drops like dew.
—WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT.
Where wind-flower and violet, amber and white,
On south-sloping brooksides should smile in the light,
O’er the cold winter beds of their late-waking roots
The frosty flake eddies, the ice crystal shoots.
—JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER.
When Roman fields are red with cyclamen,
And in the palace gardens you may find,
Under great leaves and sheltering briony-bind,
Clusters of cream-white violets, O then
The ruined city of immortal men
Must smile, a little to her fate resigned.
—EDMUND W. GOSSE.


