161. The Month of Mary
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{284} (A Song.) |
GREEN are the leaves, and sweet the flowers, |
And rich the hues of May; |
We see them in the gardens round, |
And market-paniers gay: |
And e'en among our streets, and lanes, |
And alleys, we descry, |
By fitful gleams, the fair sunshine, |
The blue transparent sky. |
Chorus.
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O Mother maid, be thou our aid, |
Now in the opening year; |
Lest sights of earth to sin give birth, |
And bring the tempter near. {285} |
Green is the grass, but wait awhile, |
'Twill grow, and then will wither; |
The flowrets, brightly as they smile, |
Shall perish altogether: |
The merry sun, you sure would say, |
It ne'er could set in gloom; |
But earth's best joys have all an end, |
And sin, a heavy doom. |
Chorus.
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But Mother maid, thou dost not fade; |
With stars above thy brow, |
And the pale moon beneath thy feet, |
For ever throned art thou. |
The green green grass, the glittering grove, |
The heaven's majestic dome, |
They image forth a tenderer bower, |
A more refulgent home; |
They tell us of that Paradise |
Of everlasting rest, |
And that high Tree, all flowers and fruit, |
The sweetest, yet the best.{286} |
Chorus.
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O Mary, pure and beautiful, |
Thou art the Queen of May; |
Our garlands wear about thy hair, |
And they will ne'er decay. |
The Oratory.
1850. |
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