5 DECEMBER 1896, Page 29

POETRY.

THE LILY.

I DREAMED that after wandering long I came To a dark garden with frail souls for flowers; And saw the gentle lady we call Death

Pace to and fro ; above each bloom she bent, Then passed : a slumbrous sky above her rolled Cloud upon cloud : and from those human flowers A tragic odour like emotion rose.

I followed in her steps, and now she touched Some poppy that had been a dreamer frail, Or rose that was a passionate Eastern queen.

But on a sudden I implored her hand, And should have fallen : from a lily near What sweet and paining odour to my brain Darted, with delicate, unhappy smell Of trouble old and gladness far away !

I knew more surely than from any face, More certainly remembered than at words, And slowly swooning said, "'Tie she ! 'tie she !"

Then looking to that lady cold, whose face No sternness and no pity had, I said, " Lady, this flower but a little while,

0 ! but a little while, has risen here :

Have a deep care of it ! a small neglect, A brief oblivion overburdens it.

For she, that is this flower, and merely blows So strangely silent and so white, was used To be much loved, and guarded wistfully.

0 ! from this flower be never far away ! "

But she to whom I spoke moved slowly on, And as I walked beside her, I awoke.

STEPHEN PHILLIPS.