The Offering of Love
The flowers that bloom on the bosom of Earth,
Though sweet in their odour, and rich in their hue,
Are emblems too fleeting of beauty and worth,
For a gift of affection, dear Mary, to you.
For you I have chosen a bouquet of flowers,
That ne'er drank a dew-drop nor glow'd in the sun;
They were form'd as the solace of wearisome hours,
In a Convent's deep shade, by an innocent Nun.
Still in beauty will bloom this fair effort of Art,
When the offspring of Flora are blighted and dead;
As a proof of my love, 'twill be dear to thy heart,
Though sweet in their odour, and rich in their hue,
Are emblems too fleeting of beauty and worth,
For a gift of affection, dear Mary, to you.
For you I have chosen a bouquet of flowers,
That ne'er drank a dew-drop nor glow'd in the sun;
They were form'd as the solace of wearisome hours,
In a Convent's deep shade, by an innocent Nun.
Still in beauty will bloom this fair effort of Art,
When the offspring of Flora are blighted and dead;
As a proof of my love, 'twill be dear to thy heart,