C.D. Warner, et al., comp.
The Library of the World’s Best Literature. An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.
Norman Gale (18621942)
June in London
B
Reeling under Cicero;
London landscape, roof and blind
Blacker e’en than London snow;
Pupils coming all day long,
All my pause the thought that she,
She I love, my joy and song,
Dreams by day and night of me.
Ah, might I gather a rose with its dew
For her heart on this bright June morning!
Planned to make a Master sour;
Thirty lines of Virgil’s gold
Slowly melting in an hour!
Ovid’s ingots and the gems
Horace polished for our eyes
In a maze of roots and stems,
Hurdy-gurdies, cabmen’s cries!
Ah, might I gather a rose in its dew
For her heart on this bright June morning!
Catch my love’s long tresses fair,
E’en as Grecian branches shook
Down Diana’s crown of hair!
While on Cæsar’s bridge I stand,
Fancy brings (but could they speak!)
Laura’s lips, and, faintly tanned,
Peachy glimpses of her cheek!
Ah, might I gather a rose in its dew
For her heart on this bright June morning!