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Poem by Digby Mackworth Dolben


The Lily


Once, on the river banks we knew,
A child, who laughing ran to choose
A lily there, essayed to tread
The lawn of leaves that outward spread
To where the very fairest blew,
And slipped from love and life and light,
Into the shiny depth beneath;
While through the tangle and the ooze
Up bubbled all his little breath.

Above, the lilies calmly white
Were floating still at eventide,
When, as it chanced, a boat went down
Returning to the royal town,
Wherein a noble lady lay
Among the cushions dreamily,
Who leant above the gilded side
And plucked the flower carelessly,
And wore it at the ball that night.



Digby Mackworth Dolben


Digby Mackworth Dolben's other poems:
  1. Requests
  2. Methought, through Many Years and Lands
  3. Dinae Munusculum
  4. Homo Factus Est
  5. There Was One Who Walked in Shadow


Poems of the other poets with the same name:

  • Albert Watson The Lily ("EMBLEM of beauty and sorrow")
  • Caroline Fry (Wilson) The Lily ("The spot where I loiter'd was lonely and wild")

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