What shall the Soft Breeze do for thee?
What shall I do with my faint, sweet blowing,
Breathing, blowing,
My blessing bestowing?
I pray thee, Soft Breeze,
Do thou blow, for me!
Stir in the trees
And breathe in the grasses,
The soft, low grasses,
And when the tall buttercup,
Tall in the grasses,
Thy light foot passes,
Gather for me
A wee grain of gold from its treasures rare,
A ray of the sunlight it treasures there;
Then beg of the daisies a bit of their white,
Pure, pure white,
And two tiny petals, crimson tipped,
Because in God’s love they have just been dipped,
And bearing the sunlight, the whiteness and love,
Breathing, blowing,
Fair blessings bestowing,
Among the soft grasses
And tree-tops above,
High in the cloud-land’s silvery sheen,
Low in the winding valleys between,
Seek my wee girlie
Who’s just thirteen,
With hair so curly,—
The curliest hair you ever have seen,
The brownest hair you ever have seen,—
With eyes so blue,
Like skies so blue,
And hide thy gifts in her heart so true,
For to-day she’s just thirteen,
Thirteen.