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"Lily of the Valley" is a song by British rock band Queen. It was written by lead singer Freddie Mercury , who also plays the piano and provides all the vocals on the track. It was originally featured on Queen's third album, Sheer Heart Attack , released in 1974, and is one of the album's few ballads.
Le Lys dans la Vallée (English: The Lily of the Valley) is an 1835 novel about love and society by the French novelist and playwright Honoré de Balzac (1799–1850). (The title, in French, does not refer to the English flower called "lily of the valley", which is called "muguet" in French).
The Lily of the Valley is a standard gospel song which has appeared in many protestant hymnals. It was written by Charles W. Fry reflecting his experience with the Salvation Army . Fry and his family were members of the Salvation Army organization founded by William Booth which was then in crisis.
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19th-century illustration. Lily of the valley (Convallaria majalis / ˌ k ɒ n v ə ˈ l ɛər i ə m ə ˈ dʒ eɪ l ɪ s /), [2] sometimes written lily-of-the-valley, [3] is a woodland flowering plant with sweetly scented, pendent, bell-shaped white flowers borne in sprays in spring.
Sweet language, full of love Ua lawa iā ʻoe me aʻu Binding you to me, forever Hoʻohihi i ka nani I long to see you Pua mai a ka lehua Flower of the lehua: Ānehe au e kiʻi Let me take you and pluck you I pua kau no kuʻu umauma And press you close to me ʻO ka ʻike keia Now that I know ʻO wau nō kou hoa like That you and I are alike
Lily of the West" is a traditional British and Irish folk song, best known today as an American folk song, [1] [2] it is listed as number 957 in the Roud Folk Song Index and has a Laws Number of P27. The American version is about a man who travels to Louisville and falls in love with a woman named Mary, Flora or Molly, the eponymous Lily of the ...
Another candidate is the autumn-flowering Sternbergia lutea, one of the English common names of which is ‘lily-of-the field’. [4] France notes that flowers were less specifically defined in that era, and lily could be a word referring to any showy variety. [5] The verse could also just mean flowers in general, rather than a specific variety.