CRIED Ciss to the breeze, as under the trees, 
    She lay at her ease, one day, 
'From thy rovings cease, and a maiden to please, 
    Of thy doings breeze now say! 
 
'Be it so,' sang he; 'from the west I be, 
    And where-ever in glee I rove, 
In lane or on lea, with the blooms I'm free, 
    And they—ever me—they love. 
 
'The primrose that well may fear when the fell, 
    Fierce north winds yell, I seek, 
When lured by my spell, she peers from her cell, 
    And a smile gilds the dell-pet's cheek. 
 
'The violet meek in her velvet sleek, 
    In love with the freak, alway, 
To my fancy weak appeareth to seek, 
    When I play with her cheek, more play. 
 
'The daisy a-drest in her blood-laced vest, 
    In her deep green nest, I know, 
When her lips I've prest, with a pleasure blest, 
    Is her little breast a glow. 
 
'The glad daffodil oft dances her fill, 
    As under the hill glide I, 
And her pearly tears spill down into the rill, 
    That yet with a trill leaps by. 
 
'See, a fairy bold, her vesture of gold, 
    The crocus unfold, in mirth, 
And glories untold, where I've kist the mold, 
    Illumine the cold, cold earth.' 
 
Thus sang sang the breeze a maiden to please, 
    And Ciss in the trees, that night, 
To rapture a prey sang Robin the lay, 
    When a kiss did the may requite.
Joseph Skipsey
http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/the-breezelet/