Skip to content
Linespedia

Queen Summer Or, The Tourney Of The Lily And The Rose

Topics: classic

When Summer on the earth was queen     She held her court in gardens green     Fair hung with tapestry of leaves,     Where threads of gold the sun enweaves     With checquered patterns on the floor     Of velvet lawns the scythe smoothes o'er:     Their waving fans the soft winds spread     Each way to cool Queen Summer's head:     The woodland dove made music soft,     And Eros touched his lute full oft.     Round Time's dial thronged the hours,     Masking in the Masque of Flowers     Like knights and ladies fair be-dight     In silk attire, both red and white.     And as the winds about them played,     And shook the flowers or disarrayed,     A whispered word among them goes     Of how the Lily flouts the Rose,     Suitors for Summer's favor dear,     To win the crown of all the year--     And how each champion brave would fight,     Queen Summer to decide the right.     Then shrill the wind-winged heralds blew;     The lists were set in Summer's view,     With blazoned shields, & pennons spruce     Of fluttering flag & fleur-de-luce:     And spread with 'broidered hangings gay,     Till all was ready for the fray.     Between their banners white and red,     Of Rose and Lily overhead,     Queen Summer took her judgment seat,     Whom all the crowd of flowers did greet.     The silver arum-trumpet's sound     With tongues of gold, & to the ground     The shining champions each did ride,     Their party-colours flaunting wide.     Came first the glowing Rose in view,     With crimson pennon fluttering new;     With glittering spines all armed he came,     With lance and shield--a rose aflame;     With tossing crest and mantling free,     On fiery steed,--a sight to see!     Nor long the Lily knight delayed;     In silver armour white arrayed,     He flashed like light upon the scene,     A lamp amid the garden green.     Milk-white his horse, & housings fair     With silver lilies shining there.     The summer winds the onset blew:     With level lance each champion flew,     And clashed together, mid a snow     Of petals on the grass below.     Pressed eager then the gazing rows:     Some cried, "the Lily", some, "the Rose"     But while the fate of battle hung,     Again the silver trumpets sung;     And, sudden charging from each side,     Of Roses and of Lilies ride     A host to still maintain the strife     For roses or for lilies' life     Rose favoured knights of maidens true,     Their pennons blushing with each hue     Of Rose-craft, since from wild thorn frail     Their order grew--through dark & pale     Of maiden-bloom to damask deep,     Or Gloire-de-Dijon that doth keep     Enfolded fire within his breast,     Still golden hearted like the rest.     Like a cloud of morn they bore,     Or rosy wave on grassy shore,     That, breaking, dashed the silver spray     Thay met--the Lily-lances play;     In crested legends on that came     Against them--snow & burning flame     Mixing with the crimson flood     Of roses & their fragrant blood,     Whereof the grass undue was rife,     As surged & rolled the floral strife,     With checquered fortune o'er the green,     Until at last up-rose the Queen:     And caused the zephyr horns to blow     A truce, the victor's crown to show.     But like a garland on the ground     Of roses & of lilies found,     So linked & locked in strife they lay     Each silver stem & clinging spray,     The doughty champions could not rise     Before the Queen to claim her prize.     So to the field of battle down     She stepped, with rose & lily crown     Of silver & of gold fair wrought;     And thus Queen Summer spake her thought:     And to each warrior thus did say:     Read in the fortune of your fray     Fit emblem sweet of unity,     Nor Rose nor Lily plant on high,     But side by side in equal right,     And pleasant cheer the Red & White:     That men & maids be glad to see,     Always in pleasant company,     Life & Love close linked together,     And strong to bear times' wintry weather     Love not consumed in passion's heart     But golden flamed & stedfast, sweet:     Time's snows shall quench not, though they hide:     Each spring renews the rosy tide:     Each lover in his lady's face     Sees roses blent with lilies' grace:     The poet & the painter praise     This heraldry of summer days;     And every garden sweet that blows     Doth set the Lily by the Rose.     Peace, then in all my borders be,     Beneath the silvern olive tree."     Each rose, each lily's head bent low,     And each one sought his fallen foe:     And careful hands the wounded bore,     With balm and honey to restore:     And trimmed the grass & decked each seat,     And made all fit for dancer's feet;     Beneath the summer full-orbed moon,     Ruddy & gold that rose full soon,     Like rose & lily fused in fire,     Ere the sunset's torch expire.     Then forth each knightly lily led     A blushing rosy dame so red;     Nor lily hands or hearts denied     The rose-hued warriors erst defied.     Light-footed through the dance's maze,     Quick they moved like wingd fays;     As measured music soft did swell,     And echoed deep from bosky dell,     Till, from the leafy forest side,     The sweet-tongued nightingale replied,     Dissolved in streams of silver sound,     Merged in the moonlight, lost & found;     Like the dancers, till in shade,     Of Summer's verdant night they fade.

AI analysis available. Enable JavaScript to interact.

About this line

"When Summer on the earth was queen..."

This evocative piece by Walter Crane, titled "Queen Summer Or, The Tourney Of The Lily And The Rose", represents a masterful exploration of classic. The lines capture a profound emotional resonance... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

Classified Tags

Related lines

"A Kid vowed to Jove, so might he     Find his herd, & his herd did he see     Soon, of lions the prey:     Then 'twas--"Get me away,     And a"

"1.     Three children sliding on the ice,     All on a summer's day,     As it fell out, they all fell in,     The rest they ran away. 2.     N"

"In an old world garden dreaming,     Where the flowers had human names,     Methought, in fantastic seeming,     They disported as squires and"

"Schlaf, Kindlein, schlaf,     Draussen steht ein Schaf,     Stsst sich an ein em Steinelein,     That ihm weh das Beinelein,     Schlaf, Kind"

"Here morning in the ploughman's songs is met     Ere yet one footstep shows in all the sky,     And twilight in the east, a doubt as yet,     S"

"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

Continue Reading

"A Kid vowed to Jove, so might he     Find his herd..."

Weekly Poetic Insight

Join our literary Sanctuary

Get the most inspiring lines, poetic analysis, and secret shayaris delivered to your inbox every Sunday.