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Poem by Henry Van Dyke


A Lover’s Envy


I envy every flower that blows 
Along the meadow where she goes, 
And every bird that sings to her, 
And every breeze that brings to her
The fragrance of the rose. 

I envy every poet’s rhyme
That moves her heart at eventime,
And every tree that wears for her
Its brightest bloom, and bears for her
The fruitage of its prime. 

I envy every Southern night
That paves her path with moonbeams white,
And silvers all the leaves for her,
And in their shadow weaves for her
A dream of dear delight. 

I envy none whose love requires
Of her a gift, a task that tires:
I only long to live to her,
I only ask to give to her
All that her heart desires.



Henry Van Dyke


Henry Van Dyke's other poems:
  1. The Wind of Sorrow
  2. War-Music
  3. Nepenthe
  4. The Ancestral Dwelling
  5. The Heavenly Hills of Holland


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