C.D. Warner, et al., comp.
The Library of the World’s Best Literature. An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.
John Fraser (17501811)
The Maiden and the Lily
A
Amid the thyme and clover;
No fairer lily ever blew,
Search all the wide world over.
Its beauty passed into my heart:
I knew ’twas very silly,
But I was then a foolish maid,
And it—a perfect lily.
With years of knowledge laden,
And him I questioned with a sigh,
Like any foolish maiden:—
“Wise sir, please tell me wherein lies—
I know the question’s silly—
The something that my art defies,
And makes a perfect lily.”
Then tore it, leaf and petal,
And talked to me for full an hour,
And thought the point to settle:—
“Therein it lies,” at length he cries;
And I—I know ’twas silly—
Could only weep and say, “But where—
O doctor, where’s my lily?”