The Cap And Bells Testo

Testo The Cap And Bells

The jester walked in the garden;The garden had fallen still;He bade his soul rise upwardAnd stand on her window-still.It rose in a straight blue garment,When owls began to call;It had grown wise-tongued by thinkingof a quiet and light footfall.But the young queen would not listen;She rose in her pale night-gown;She drew in the heavy casementAnd pushed the latches down.He bade his heart to go to her,When the owls called out no more;In a red and quivering garmentIt sang to her through the door.It had grown sweet-tongued by dreamingOf a flutter of flower-like hair;But she took up her fan from the tableAnd weaved it off on the air.I have cap and bells,' he pondered,"I will send them to her and die';And when the morning whitenedHe left them where she went by.She laid them upon her bosom,Under a cloud of her hair,And her red lips sang them a love-songTill stars grew out of the air.She opened her door and her window,And the heart and the soul came through,To her right hand came the red one,To her left hand came the blue.They set up a noise like crickets,A chattering wise and sweet,And her hair was a folded flowerAnd the quiet of love in her feet.