94 
Perchance there grew a Jasmine tree 
Beside his own ancestral hall. 
Where he had loved, in childhood’s glee, 
To watch its short-lived blossoms fall: 
Alas ! how soon those blossoms died, 
When severed from their native stem ! 
Did not like early doom betide 
That captive ? Drooped he not like them ? 
Well knew the slender Jasmine tree 
Within which casement high to peep. 
And where on soft winds gi’acefully 
With pendant stai’iy branch to sweep. 
She looked in bowers where ladyes sung 
Of love and knightly fealty. 
And silently her sweet sighs flung 
O’er many a tale of chivalrie. 
And when to battle’s sanguine plain 
Each gallant knight must fearless hie. 
And ladye-loves gazed on the train. 
With heaving breast and weeping eye. 
The lovely Jasmine drooped her head. 
As if in grief for thosa so dear. 
And from her snowy chalice shed. 
In sympathy, a dewy tear. 
