GANHARDINE'S SONG

By Frederic Manning

When my lady climbs the stair,

From the wet, surf-beaten sands,

Loosening her cloak of hair,

With her slender, foam-white hands,

All my soul cries out in me:

What fair things God maketh be!

Praise her white, and red, and gold;

Praise her lips made sweet with mirth,

Her grave eyes, that dreaming hold

Tears, which tremble ere their birth!

Yet what song shall snare the feet

Of white dawn upon the wheat?

Surely earth's swift-changing grace,

Starry waters, starry skies

Fallen in some flower-loved place,

Speak such peace as speak her eyes;

There earth's sudden wonders are

Glassed, as waters glass a star.

When my lady climbs the stair,

Every wandering golden tress

Streams out, through the living air,

Like a flame for loveliness,

And my soul cries out in me:

What fair things God maketh be.