THE LITTLE DAISY GIRL. There was a little girl, Who longed to be a flower, So she teased her golden curl, As she wished it by the hour. One day her limbs began to shrivel, And her clothes to all unravel, Hair transformed to golden petals, As her roots dug in the gravel. Then said she, "This is simply quite amazing, Here I stand within the sod, As a waving yellow daisy, Who no more shall ever plod. "Of fate or God am I the seed, So bright and pretty and gay? Or of Satan, such a weed? I pray not!" she had to say. Soon a bee began to hover, As it kissed her pretty face. What a happy little lover, On its singing wings of lace. Then came a caterpillar, Chewing all her leaves to shreds, Leaving her to wilter, Down among the flowerbeds. So the sun began to burn, Upon her golden yellow spray, But she found she could not turn, Instead to face the other way. In one day did she grow old, Whisper dry and all alone, Bowed in age, frail and cold, Like a poor, tired, nodding crone. Happy was she as a child, Gayer still a simple flower, Now she's buried in the wild, With pretty daisies for her bower. THE SONG OF CAROL Sing to me the Song of Carol, Brightest ribbons in a breeze, Dancing bannerettes. A fair! All Snapping colors midst the trees. Such wonder that the day denies, In tinted white with blue between. Reflected spell, bound in the eyes, No summer, scudded cloudy scene. Oh land of crook and silver brook, Of shadow dank and mossy bank, Restore what she before forsook, Where plundered stones asunder sank. From the mire will come no spire, Long forgotten this old castle. Fawn and fish, and swan's desire, Wistful leap from thistled tassel. So may in dreams come what seems neigh, The plunder of your wonder years, And to the sky your prayers fly, To banish all your early fears. Now with