The Project Gutenberg eBook ofThe Rose-Jar

The Project Gutenberg eBook ofThe Rose-JarThis ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online atwww.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this eBook.Title: The Rose-JarAuthor: Thomas S. JonesRelease date: January 4, 2009 [eBook #27700]Language: EnglishCredits: E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland, Barbara Tozier, and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net)*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ROSE-JAR ***

This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online atwww.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this eBook.

Title: The Rose-JarAuthor: Thomas S. JonesRelease date: January 4, 2009 [eBook #27700]Language: EnglishCredits: E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland, Barbara Tozier, and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net)

Title: The Rose-Jar

Author: Thomas S. Jones

Author: Thomas S. Jones

Release date: January 4, 2009 [eBook #27700]

Language: English

Credits: E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland, Barbara Tozier, and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net)

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ROSE-JAR ***

E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland, Barbara Tozier,and theProject Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team(http://www.pgdp.net)

The Rose-JarThomas S. Jones, Jr.Author ofThe Path o’ Dreams, etc.Clinton, New YorkGEORGE WILLIAM BROWNING

Thomas S. Jones, Jr.

Author ofThe Path o’ Dreams, etc.

Clinton, New York

GEORGE WILLIAM BROWNING

Copyrighted 1906 by Thomas S. Jones, Jr.The author desires to thank the editors of Appleton’s Magazine, Everybody’s Magazine, Lippincott’s Magazine, The New York Times, The Smart Set, and the other publications in which the verses in this collection originally appeared, for their kind permission to reprint.

Copyrighted 1906 by Thomas S. Jones, Jr.

The author desires to thank the editors of Appleton’s Magazine, Everybody’s Magazine, Lippincott’s Magazine, The New York Times, The Smart Set, and the other publications in which the verses in this collection originally appeared, for their kind permission to reprint.

This Edition ofThe Rose-JarPrinted by George William Browning at Clinton New York during the Summer of 1906 consists of Three Hundred copies on Deckle-Edged Paper, with Twelve additional copies on Imperial Japan Vellum (Insetsu Kioku).NUMBER 258

This Edition ofThe Rose-JarPrinted by George William Browning at Clinton New York during the Summer of 1906 consists of Three Hundred copies on Deckle-Edged Paper, with Twelve additional copies on Imperial Japan Vellum (Insetsu Kioku).

NUMBER 258

To the Memory of My Mother

CONTENTSAs in a Rose-Jar11The Island12You and I13A Ballade of Old Romance14A Voice from the Far Away16April17A Yesterday18Violets19A Song of Life20As a Still Brook21At the Window22A Sea Spell23The Silent Country24The Sport of a God25Remembrance26In Days of Old27We Once Built a House o’ Dreams28A Song of the Way29In Trinity Church-Yard at Sunset30Where Cross-Roads Part31Saida32In Arcady33The Summer Rain34Impression35Derelicts36The End of the Day38Tristesse39Interlude40To You, Dear Heart41Twilight42The Poet43The Hunchback44The Little Ghosts45I Know a Quiet Vale46Song47Immutability48In the Fall o’ Year49Love’s Song50The Golden Hour51The Dream-Way52The Spirit of Autumn53On the Long Road54A Postlude55An Old Song56Old Roses57

The Rose-Jar

As in a rose-jar filled with petals sweetBlown long ago in some old garden place,Mayhap, where you and I, a little space,Drank deep of love and knew that love was fleet—Or leaves once gathered from a lost retreatBy one who never will again retraceHer silent footsteps—one, whose gentle faceWas fairer than the roses at her feet;So, deep within the vase of memory,I keep my dust of roses fresh and dearAs in the days before I knew the smartOf time and death. Nor aught can take from meThe haunting fragrance that still lingers here—As in a rose-jar, so within my heart!

As in a rose-jar filled with petals sweetBlown long ago in some old garden place,Mayhap, where you and I, a little space,Drank deep of love and knew that love was fleet—Or leaves once gathered from a lost retreatBy one who never will again retraceHer silent footsteps—one, whose gentle faceWas fairer than the roses at her feet;

As in a rose-jar filled with petals sweet

Blown long ago in some old garden place,

Mayhap, where you and I, a little space,

Drank deep of love and knew that love was fleet—

Or leaves once gathered from a lost retreat

By one who never will again retrace

Her silent footsteps—one, whose gentle face

Was fairer than the roses at her feet;

So, deep within the vase of memory,I keep my dust of roses fresh and dearAs in the days before I knew the smartOf time and death. Nor aught can take from meThe haunting fragrance that still lingers here—As in a rose-jar, so within my heart!

So, deep within the vase of memory,

I keep my dust of roses fresh and dear

As in the days before I knew the smart

Of time and death. Nor aught can take from me

The haunting fragrance that still lingers here—

As in a rose-jar, so within my heart!

There is an island in the silent sea,Whose marge the wistful waves lap listlessly—An isle of rest for those who used to be.For ne’er an echo wakes that towering wall,Whose blackened crags answer none other callSave the lone ocean’s rhythmic rise and fall.Only the song the sea sings as she lavesThat sleep-bound shore with sad caressing waves,The while the dead sleep sweeter in their graves.’Tis oh! so still they sleep within each tomb,Cool in long shadows of the cypress gloom,Breathing in death the moon-flower’s rank perfume.They know not when slow barges on the mereEnter the portals of that place austere—Enter and so forever disappear!And in this island of a silent sea,Whose marge e’er wistful waves lap listlessly,Is rest,—is peace for all eternity.

There is an island in the silent sea,Whose marge the wistful waves lap listlessly—An isle of rest for those who used to be.

There is an island in the silent sea,

Whose marge the wistful waves lap listlessly—

An isle of rest for those who used to be.

For ne’er an echo wakes that towering wall,Whose blackened crags answer none other callSave the lone ocean’s rhythmic rise and fall.

For ne’er an echo wakes that towering wall,

Whose blackened crags answer none other call

Save the lone ocean’s rhythmic rise and fall.

Only the song the sea sings as she lavesThat sleep-bound shore with sad caressing waves,The while the dead sleep sweeter in their graves.

Only the song the sea sings as she laves

That sleep-bound shore with sad caressing waves,

The while the dead sleep sweeter in their graves.

’Tis oh! so still they sleep within each tomb,Cool in long shadows of the cypress gloom,Breathing in death the moon-flower’s rank perfume.

’Tis oh! so still they sleep within each tomb,

Cool in long shadows of the cypress gloom,

Breathing in death the moon-flower’s rank perfume.

They know not when slow barges on the mereEnter the portals of that place austere—Enter and so forever disappear!

They know not when slow barges on the mere

Enter the portals of that place austere—

Enter and so forever disappear!

And in this island of a silent sea,Whose marge e’er wistful waves lap listlessly,Is rest,—is peace for all eternity.

And in this island of a silent sea,

Whose marge e’er wistful waves lap listlessly,

Is rest,—is peace for all eternity.

Over the hills where the pine-trees grow,With a laugh to answer the wind at play.Why do I laugh? I do not know,But you and I once passed this way.Down in the hollow now white with snowMy heart is singing a song today.Why do I sing? I do not know,But you and I were here in May.

Over the hills where the pine-trees grow,With a laugh to answer the wind at play.Why do I laugh? I do not know,But you and I once passed this way.

Over the hills where the pine-trees grow,

With a laugh to answer the wind at play.

Why do I laugh? I do not know,

But you and I once passed this way.

Down in the hollow now white with snowMy heart is singing a song today.Why do I sing? I do not know,But you and I were here in May.

Down in the hollow now white with snow

My heart is singing a song today.

Why do I sing? I do not know,

But you and I were here in May.

When April spreads her mantle greenAcross the pasture-lands of snow,And Spring’s first scarlet breasts are seenWhere treetops rustle to and fro;Then come fair fragrant dreams as thoughOur lightest fancy to entranceAnd paint us what we fain would knowAdown the lanes of Old Romance.Anon, we see the golden sheenOf burnished mail the sunbeams throw,Flashing the poplars tall between,As knights ride by to meet the foe;Or, mayhap, shepherd lads who blowOn slender pipes, a pastoral dance—Ah, strong were they in weal and woeAdown the lanes of Old Romance!But now the vast years intervene,The fountain long has ceased its flow,And silence rules the lone demesneThat once held such a goodly show;Yet time, at least, does this bestowNor leave the best to fleeting chance—They live again in fancy’s glowAdown the lanes of Old Romance.ENVOYSweet, still for us some blossoms growFrom out that dim and dear expanse—Come, take my hand and we shall goAdown the lanes of Old Romance!

When April spreads her mantle greenAcross the pasture-lands of snow,And Spring’s first scarlet breasts are seenWhere treetops rustle to and fro;Then come fair fragrant dreams as thoughOur lightest fancy to entranceAnd paint us what we fain would knowAdown the lanes of Old Romance.

When April spreads her mantle green

Across the pasture-lands of snow,

And Spring’s first scarlet breasts are seen

Where treetops rustle to and fro;

Then come fair fragrant dreams as though

Our lightest fancy to entrance

And paint us what we fain would know

Adown the lanes of Old Romance.

Anon, we see the golden sheenOf burnished mail the sunbeams throw,Flashing the poplars tall between,As knights ride by to meet the foe;Or, mayhap, shepherd lads who blowOn slender pipes, a pastoral dance—Ah, strong were they in weal and woeAdown the lanes of Old Romance!

Anon, we see the golden sheen

Of burnished mail the sunbeams throw,

Flashing the poplars tall between,

As knights ride by to meet the foe;

Or, mayhap, shepherd lads who blow

On slender pipes, a pastoral dance—

Ah, strong were they in weal and woe

Adown the lanes of Old Romance!

But now the vast years intervene,The fountain long has ceased its flow,And silence rules the lone demesneThat once held such a goodly show;Yet time, at least, does this bestowNor leave the best to fleeting chance—They live again in fancy’s glowAdown the lanes of Old Romance.

But now the vast years intervene,

The fountain long has ceased its flow,

And silence rules the lone demesne

That once held such a goodly show;

Yet time, at least, does this bestow

Nor leave the best to fleeting chance—

They live again in fancy’s glow

Adown the lanes of Old Romance.

ENVOY

Sweet, still for us some blossoms growFrom out that dim and dear expanse—Come, take my hand and we shall goAdown the lanes of Old Romance!

Sweet, still for us some blossoms grow

From out that dim and dear expanse—

Come, take my hand and we shall go

Adown the lanes of Old Romance!

I heard a voice from the far awaySoftly say this to me—“You will find the heart of the world some dayAnd the why of the things that be;You will see the grief of the yea and nayAnd the price of frailty.“And upon your lute you will weave a themeWhich the world will harken and know;For every note of the song will teemWith a great soul’s overflow—You will speak the meaning within a dreamAnd the pain in the afterglow.“But for all of this there’s a price—’Tis the price of minstrelsy—You will never have of the things you play,Sad singer of poetry,And throughout your life you will go for aye,Heart-hungry and silently!”I heard a voice from the far awaySoftly say this to me.

I heard a voice from the far awaySoftly say this to me—“You will find the heart of the world some dayAnd the why of the things that be;You will see the grief of the yea and nayAnd the price of frailty.

I heard a voice from the far away

Softly say this to me—

“You will find the heart of the world some day

And the why of the things that be;

You will see the grief of the yea and nay

And the price of frailty.

“And upon your lute you will weave a themeWhich the world will harken and know;For every note of the song will teemWith a great soul’s overflow—You will speak the meaning within a dreamAnd the pain in the afterglow.

“And upon your lute you will weave a theme

Which the world will harken and know;

For every note of the song will teem

With a great soul’s overflow—

You will speak the meaning within a dream

And the pain in the afterglow.

“But for all of this there’s a price—’Tis the price of minstrelsy—You will never have of the things you play,Sad singer of poetry,And throughout your life you will go for aye,Heart-hungry and silently!”I heard a voice from the far awaySoftly say this to me.

“But for all of this there’s a price—

’Tis the price of minstrelsy—

You will never have of the things you play,

Sad singer of poetry,

And throughout your life you will go for aye,

Heart-hungry and silently!”

I heard a voice from the far away

Softly say this to me.

Throughout the vale again Narcissus criesAnd Echo answers from her dark retreat,While Zephyr heavy-laden with the sweet,Fresh scent of blooms across the pasture hies;Above, the blueness of the April skies,Matched by the lure unto the wandering feetThat e’er must go ere Spring could be completeTo the green wood where laughing Eros lies.O April lover, hear the pipes that call,The pipes of Pan a-blowing lustily,They call to you and me, and he who hearsMust ever after be Young April’s thrall—So, faring thus together, we shall seeThe Islands of the Blest between the Spheres!

Throughout the vale again Narcissus criesAnd Echo answers from her dark retreat,While Zephyr heavy-laden with the sweet,Fresh scent of blooms across the pasture hies;Above, the blueness of the April skies,Matched by the lure unto the wandering feetThat e’er must go ere Spring could be completeTo the green wood where laughing Eros lies.

Throughout the vale again Narcissus cries

And Echo answers from her dark retreat,

While Zephyr heavy-laden with the sweet,

Fresh scent of blooms across the pasture hies;

Above, the blueness of the April skies,

Matched by the lure unto the wandering feet

That e’er must go ere Spring could be complete

To the green wood where laughing Eros lies.

O April lover, hear the pipes that call,The pipes of Pan a-blowing lustily,They call to you and me, and he who hearsMust ever after be Young April’s thrall—So, faring thus together, we shall seeThe Islands of the Blest between the Spheres!

O April lover, hear the pipes that call,

The pipes of Pan a-blowing lustily,

They call to you and me, and he who hears

Must ever after be Young April’s thrall—

So, faring thus together, we shall see

The Islands of the Blest between the Spheres!

I held you in my arms—so happy I,Who quite forgot the while that moments fly;Nor ever dreamed that they could pass away,Till it was yesterday.Yet, just because that hour was long agoAnd seems to me so near—well, this I knowThat sometime I shall clasp your hand and say:Was there a yesterday?

I held you in my arms—so happy I,Who quite forgot the while that moments fly;Nor ever dreamed that they could pass away,Till it was yesterday.

I held you in my arms—so happy I,

Who quite forgot the while that moments fly;

Nor ever dreamed that they could pass away,

Till it was yesterday.

Yet, just because that hour was long agoAnd seems to me so near—well, this I knowThat sometime I shall clasp your hand and say:Was there a yesterday?

Yet, just because that hour was long ago

And seems to me so near—well, this I know

That sometime I shall clasp your hand and say:

Was there a yesterday?

’Twas just at sundown, when the leaves were wetWith evening dew,Far in the fields where sky and violetBlend rifts of blue—But for a moment, deep among the flowersAnd rain-sweet grass,I saw her—loved her—and as April showersBeheld her pass.O, the lone vastness of the afterglow,Unknown before;Shall e’er I see that face where violets grow,Perchance, once more!Yet no one comes save night, with wild regretsAnd silent pain—Only sometimes the scent of violetsOn wind-blown rain.

’Twas just at sundown, when the leaves were wetWith evening dew,Far in the fields where sky and violetBlend rifts of blue—

’Twas just at sundown, when the leaves were wet

With evening dew,

Far in the fields where sky and violet

Blend rifts of blue—

But for a moment, deep among the flowersAnd rain-sweet grass,I saw her—loved her—and as April showersBeheld her pass.

But for a moment, deep among the flowers

And rain-sweet grass,

I saw her—loved her—and as April showers

Beheld her pass.

O, the lone vastness of the afterglow,Unknown before;Shall e’er I see that face where violets grow,Perchance, once more!

O, the lone vastness of the afterglow,

Unknown before;

Shall e’er I see that face where violets grow,

Perchance, once more!

Yet no one comes save night, with wild regretsAnd silent pain—Only sometimes the scent of violetsOn wind-blown rain.

Yet no one comes save night, with wild regrets

And silent pain—

Only sometimes the scent of violets

On wind-blown rain.

What if the song is sung, I say,As long as the song was sung!Did we not meet with the blood’s best playThe lash of the winds and the rain that stung,And the tang of the salty spray?Did we not drink the last drop that clungTo the golden bowl with its glowing fire,Yet so cool to our burning tongue?Did we not love with a love entireThat made up for all and a world of clayIn a moment of wild desire?What if the song is sung, I say,As long as the song was sung!

What if the song is sung, I say,As long as the song was sung!

What if the song is sung, I say,

As long as the song was sung!

Did we not meet with the blood’s best playThe lash of the winds and the rain that stung,And the tang of the salty spray?

Did we not meet with the blood’s best play

The lash of the winds and the rain that stung,

And the tang of the salty spray?

Did we not drink the last drop that clungTo the golden bowl with its glowing fire,Yet so cool to our burning tongue?

Did we not drink the last drop that clung

To the golden bowl with its glowing fire,

Yet so cool to our burning tongue?

Did we not love with a love entireThat made up for all and a world of clayIn a moment of wild desire?

Did we not love with a love entire

That made up for all and a world of clay

In a moment of wild desire?

What if the song is sung, I say,As long as the song was sung!

What if the song is sung, I say,

As long as the song was sung!

As a still brook within the woodland’s greenSings softly to itself the live-long day,Unconscious of its gentle roundelay,Its open purity and silver sheen—Knowing not how in all that wild demesne,Its music is a strain the angels playAnd its fair face a jewel amid the gray,Beshadowed places that it flows between;So your dear love, a simple forest stream,Bearing the wealth of all that life can hold,—Nor ever dreaming of the worth that liesDeep in your heart—why, you have made it seemThat every empty hour is wrought of goldAnd this tear-sodden world, a Paradise!

As a still brook within the woodland’s greenSings softly to itself the live-long day,Unconscious of its gentle roundelay,Its open purity and silver sheen—Knowing not how in all that wild demesne,Its music is a strain the angels playAnd its fair face a jewel amid the gray,Beshadowed places that it flows between;

As a still brook within the woodland’s green

Sings softly to itself the live-long day,

Unconscious of its gentle roundelay,

Its open purity and silver sheen—

Knowing not how in all that wild demesne,

Its music is a strain the angels play

And its fair face a jewel amid the gray,

Beshadowed places that it flows between;

So your dear love, a simple forest stream,Bearing the wealth of all that life can hold,—Nor ever dreaming of the worth that liesDeep in your heart—why, you have made it seemThat every empty hour is wrought of goldAnd this tear-sodden world, a Paradise!

So your dear love, a simple forest stream,

Bearing the wealth of all that life can hold,—

Nor ever dreaming of the worth that lies

Deep in your heart—why, you have made it seem

That every empty hour is wrought of gold

And this tear-sodden world, a Paradise!

I looked out of my window tallAnd laughed to see the May,For everything both great and smallWas on a holiday.Then Love came by and laughed at me,And I forgot the Spring—Only I knew the ecstasyOf madly listening.And now the branches all againAre red with vernal May,But tears have dimmed the window-pane—And no one comes my way.

I looked out of my window tallAnd laughed to see the May,For everything both great and smallWas on a holiday.

I looked out of my window tall

And laughed to see the May,

For everything both great and small

Was on a holiday.

Then Love came by and laughed at me,And I forgot the Spring—Only I knew the ecstasyOf madly listening.

Then Love came by and laughed at me,

And I forgot the Spring—

Only I knew the ecstasy

Of madly listening.

And now the branches all againAre red with vernal May,But tears have dimmed the window-pane—And no one comes my way.

And now the branches all again

Are red with vernal May,

But tears have dimmed the window-pane—

And no one comes my way.

The sunset sea—a goblet thick inlaidWith jewels wrought in golden filigree,An opal from some elfin treasuryBurning with fire and flashing every shade;While round the dim horizon, wide displayedThe clouds pile up their largess tenderlyAs if to clothe the beauty of the seaIn filmy gossamer and soft brocade.And far away I think I almost hearA horn’s faint echo through the dusk-hour’s veilAs in the happy, golden days of yore—Mayhap, e’en now upon this magic mereFrail shallops will flit by and mermaids paleWill lure us back to fairy-land once more!

The sunset sea—a goblet thick inlaidWith jewels wrought in golden filigree,An opal from some elfin treasuryBurning with fire and flashing every shade;While round the dim horizon, wide displayedThe clouds pile up their largess tenderlyAs if to clothe the beauty of the seaIn filmy gossamer and soft brocade.

The sunset sea—a goblet thick inlaid

With jewels wrought in golden filigree,

An opal from some elfin treasury

Burning with fire and flashing every shade;

While round the dim horizon, wide displayed

The clouds pile up their largess tenderly

As if to clothe the beauty of the sea

In filmy gossamer and soft brocade.

And far away I think I almost hearA horn’s faint echo through the dusk-hour’s veilAs in the happy, golden days of yore—Mayhap, e’en now upon this magic mereFrail shallops will flit by and mermaids paleWill lure us back to fairy-land once more!

And far away I think I almost hear

A horn’s faint echo through the dusk-hour’s veil

As in the happy, golden days of yore—

Mayhap, e’en now upon this magic mere

Frail shallops will flit by and mermaids pale

Will lure us back to fairy-land once more!

Wave, wave sweet blooms of May and on your wingsBear me away with drowsy winnowingsTo some far twilight land where steals a streamFrom out the cool and soundless groves of Dream.For in the Spring is such a bitter smartEven the thought of it will break my heart,So take me softly to a leafy bedWhere I shall dream and dream you are not dead!

Wave, wave sweet blooms of May and on your wingsBear me away with drowsy winnowingsTo some far twilight land where steals a streamFrom out the cool and soundless groves of Dream.

Wave, wave sweet blooms of May and on your wings

Bear me away with drowsy winnowings

To some far twilight land where steals a stream

From out the cool and soundless groves of Dream.

For in the Spring is such a bitter smartEven the thought of it will break my heart,So take me softly to a leafy bedWhere I shall dream and dream you are not dead!

For in the Spring is such a bitter smart

Even the thought of it will break my heart,

So take me softly to a leafy bed

Where I shall dream and dream you are not dead!

Though they say Jove laughs at the lover’s vow—At the lover’s vow that must break some day—Still we smiled as we loved in a distant MayWhen the blooms were heavy upon the bough.O, the mocking difference of then and now!It isn’t a thought that will make one gay,Though they say Jove laughs at the lover’s vow—At the lover’s vow that must break some day.Yet, perhaps, the god knows the best way howTo carry a mask when the feet are clay;So I too shall laugh at the merry play,For down in his heart there’s a knife, I trow,Though they say Jove laughs at the lover’s vow.

Though they say Jove laughs at the lover’s vow—At the lover’s vow that must break some day—Still we smiled as we loved in a distant MayWhen the blooms were heavy upon the bough.

Though they say Jove laughs at the lover’s vow—

At the lover’s vow that must break some day—

Still we smiled as we loved in a distant May

When the blooms were heavy upon the bough.

O, the mocking difference of then and now!It isn’t a thought that will make one gay,Though they say Jove laughs at the lover’s vow—At the lover’s vow that must break some day.

O, the mocking difference of then and now!

It isn’t a thought that will make one gay,

Though they say Jove laughs at the lover’s vow—

At the lover’s vow that must break some day.

Yet, perhaps, the god knows the best way howTo carry a mask when the feet are clay;So I too shall laugh at the merry play,For down in his heart there’s a knife, I trow,Though they say Jove laughs at the lover’s vow.

Yet, perhaps, the god knows the best way how

To carry a mask when the feet are clay;

So I too shall laugh at the merry play,

For down in his heart there’s a knife, I trow,

Though they say Jove laughs at the lover’s vow.

Sweet rosemary within the laneThe while the day is warm and clear,And ne’er a thought of bitter rainOr the road-side sere.But there are flowers more dear to meThat time can never set apart—The fragrant blooms of memoryThat grow within the heart.

Sweet rosemary within the laneThe while the day is warm and clear,And ne’er a thought of bitter rainOr the road-side sere.

Sweet rosemary within the lane

The while the day is warm and clear,

And ne’er a thought of bitter rain

Or the road-side sere.

But there are flowers more dear to meThat time can never set apart—The fragrant blooms of memoryThat grow within the heart.

But there are flowers more dear to me

That time can never set apart—

The fragrant blooms of memory

That grow within the heart.

Of all the ages’ gain, the ages’ loss,A wealth of wonders and so much away—When now hears one the woodland elves at play,Or angry dryads where tall tree-tops toss.No more they lightly tread the dewy mossAs danced they through cool haunts in ecstasy;But rank and lost the paths in lone decayWhere fairy footsteps once were wont to cross.O, happy Greeks, who knew the gods so well,To you I burn my sacrificial fire!Again reveal the mystic hidden runeWhereby to find the slopes of asphodel—Ah, then to hear Apollo charm his lyreAnd see Diana ’neath the sickle moon.

Of all the ages’ gain, the ages’ loss,A wealth of wonders and so much away—When now hears one the woodland elves at play,Or angry dryads where tall tree-tops toss.No more they lightly tread the dewy mossAs danced they through cool haunts in ecstasy;But rank and lost the paths in lone decayWhere fairy footsteps once were wont to cross.

Of all the ages’ gain, the ages’ loss,

A wealth of wonders and so much away—

When now hears one the woodland elves at play,

Or angry dryads where tall tree-tops toss.

No more they lightly tread the dewy moss

As danced they through cool haunts in ecstasy;

But rank and lost the paths in lone decay

Where fairy footsteps once were wont to cross.

O, happy Greeks, who knew the gods so well,To you I burn my sacrificial fire!Again reveal the mystic hidden runeWhereby to find the slopes of asphodel—Ah, then to hear Apollo charm his lyreAnd see Diana ’neath the sickle moon.

O, happy Greeks, who knew the gods so well,

To you I burn my sacrificial fire!

Again reveal the mystic hidden rune

Whereby to find the slopes of asphodel—

Ah, then to hear Apollo charm his lyre

And see Diana ’neath the sickle moon.

We once built a house o’ dreamsAt the break o’ dayMade from out the first gold beamsOn the sward astray.Little did we think or care’Twas not safe nor strong;We were very happy thereAnd the day was long.Now we leave our house o’ dreams,Why, we do not know;Only this—so strange it seemsAnd so hard to go!

We once built a house o’ dreamsAt the break o’ dayMade from out the first gold beamsOn the sward astray.

We once built a house o’ dreams

At the break o’ day

Made from out the first gold beams

On the sward astray.

Little did we think or care’Twas not safe nor strong;We were very happy thereAnd the day was long.

Little did we think or care

’Twas not safe nor strong;

We were very happy there

And the day was long.

Now we leave our house o’ dreams,Why, we do not know;Only this—so strange it seemsAnd so hard to go!

Now we leave our house o’ dreams,

Why, we do not know;

Only this—so strange it seems

And so hard to go!

Give me the road, the great broad road,That wanders over the hill;Give me a heart without a careAnd a free, unfettered will—Ah, thus to journey, thus to fare,With only the skies to frown,And happy I, if the ways but lieAway, away from the town.Give me the path, the wild-wood pathThat wanders deep in a dell,Where silence sleeps and sunbeams fainWould waken the slumber spell—For there the gods find the world again,Immortals of ancient lore,And time is gone, and a mad-glad faunKnows the glades of Greece once more.

Give me the road, the great broad road,That wanders over the hill;Give me a heart without a careAnd a free, unfettered will—Ah, thus to journey, thus to fare,With only the skies to frown,And happy I, if the ways but lieAway, away from the town.

Give me the road, the great broad road,

That wanders over the hill;

Give me a heart without a care

And a free, unfettered will—

Ah, thus to journey, thus to fare,

With only the skies to frown,

And happy I, if the ways but lie

Away, away from the town.

Give me the path, the wild-wood pathThat wanders deep in a dell,Where silence sleeps and sunbeams fainWould waken the slumber spell—For there the gods find the world again,Immortals of ancient lore,And time is gone, and a mad-glad faunKnows the glades of Greece once more.

Give me the path, the wild-wood path

That wanders deep in a dell,

Where silence sleeps and sunbeams fain

Would waken the slumber spell—

For there the gods find the world again,

Immortals of ancient lore,

And time is gone, and a mad-glad faun

Knows the glades of Greece once more.

How still they sleep within the city moilIn their old church-yard with its sighing trees,Where sometimes through the din a twilight breezeMakes one forget the busy streets of toil;But they have little thought of worldly spoilOr the great gain of mortal victories,Their hopes, their dreams, are cold and dead as theseQuaint, time-worn gravestones crumbling on the soil.Yet they once lived and struggled years ago;Their hearts beat madly as these hearts of ours—And now is all undone in dreamless rest?See, a great city stands against the glow—Their city, they who here beneath the flowersHave known so long God’s gift of peace, most blest!

How still they sleep within the city moilIn their old church-yard with its sighing trees,Where sometimes through the din a twilight breezeMakes one forget the busy streets of toil;But they have little thought of worldly spoilOr the great gain of mortal victories,Their hopes, their dreams, are cold and dead as theseQuaint, time-worn gravestones crumbling on the soil.

How still they sleep within the city moil

In their old church-yard with its sighing trees,

Where sometimes through the din a twilight breeze

Makes one forget the busy streets of toil;

But they have little thought of worldly spoil

Or the great gain of mortal victories,

Their hopes, their dreams, are cold and dead as these

Quaint, time-worn gravestones crumbling on the soil.

Yet they once lived and struggled years ago;Their hearts beat madly as these hearts of ours—And now is all undone in dreamless rest?See, a great city stands against the glow—Their city, they who here beneath the flowersHave known so long God’s gift of peace, most blest!

Yet they once lived and struggled years ago;

Their hearts beat madly as these hearts of ours—

And now is all undone in dreamless rest?

See, a great city stands against the glow—

Their city, they who here beneath the flowers

Have known so long God’s gift of peace, most blest!

Glad roads of Spring—O lanes of laughing MayAs fleeting as the shadow-clouds at playWith sunbeams rife upon the grassy green;O golden lanes—through roads that lie betweenAmid what darkened sweep lost I the way?Or was’t the stripling Youth, whose roundelayAwoke the echoes of the throbbing dayAnd changed to gladness all the world’s dull mien,Glad roads of Spring?Apart I stand, distraught with lone dismay,No more Youth’s gladsome biddings to obey,No more with him Love’s strewings lost to glean;The hills of years now ever intervene,And bid me say good-bye to you for aye,Glad roads of Spring!

Glad roads of Spring—O lanes of laughing MayAs fleeting as the shadow-clouds at playWith sunbeams rife upon the grassy green;O golden lanes—through roads that lie betweenAmid what darkened sweep lost I the way?

Glad roads of Spring—O lanes of laughing May

As fleeting as the shadow-clouds at play

With sunbeams rife upon the grassy green;

O golden lanes—through roads that lie between

Amid what darkened sweep lost I the way?

Or was’t the stripling Youth, whose roundelayAwoke the echoes of the throbbing dayAnd changed to gladness all the world’s dull mien,Glad roads of Spring?

Or was’t the stripling Youth, whose roundelay

Awoke the echoes of the throbbing day

And changed to gladness all the world’s dull mien,

Glad roads of Spring?

Apart I stand, distraught with lone dismay,No more Youth’s gladsome biddings to obey,No more with him Love’s strewings lost to glean;The hills of years now ever intervene,And bid me say good-bye to you for aye,Glad roads of Spring!

Apart I stand, distraught with lone dismay,

No more Youth’s gladsome biddings to obey,

No more with him Love’s strewings lost to glean;

The hills of years now ever intervene,

And bid me say good-bye to you for aye,

Glad roads of Spring!

We passed along the high-road, you and I,Though I remember not the place nor when;Only the wonder of your face, and thenThat you passed by.But that was long ago, and I forget;Perhaps ’twere better that I went alone,You might not e’er have loved me had you known,And yet, and yet—

We passed along the high-road, you and I,Though I remember not the place nor when;Only the wonder of your face, and thenThat you passed by.

We passed along the high-road, you and I,

Though I remember not the place nor when;

Only the wonder of your face, and then

That you passed by.

But that was long ago, and I forget;Perhaps ’twere better that I went alone,You might not e’er have loved me had you known,And yet, and yet—

But that was long ago, and I forget;

Perhaps ’twere better that I went alone,

You might not e’er have loved me had you known,

And yet, and yet—

Although ’tis but a memory,Still in the days of long agoWe tended sheep in Arcady.Then were we both of fancy freeAnd laughing Youth had much to show,Although ’tis but a memory.Again the pasture lands we seeWhere in the golden summer glowWe tended sheep in Arcady.And hear the tender harmonyOf shepherd pipes that softly blow,Although ’tis but a memory.Nor thought of any end had weAs through the grasses to and froWe tended sheep in Arcady.So, what if life now empty be,Of all the past this do we know,Although ’tis but a memory,We tended sheep in Arcady!

Although ’tis but a memory,Still in the days of long agoWe tended sheep in Arcady.

Although ’tis but a memory,

Still in the days of long ago

We tended sheep in Arcady.

Then were we both of fancy freeAnd laughing Youth had much to show,Although ’tis but a memory.

Then were we both of fancy free

And laughing Youth had much to show,

Although ’tis but a memory.

Again the pasture lands we seeWhere in the golden summer glowWe tended sheep in Arcady.

Again the pasture lands we see

Where in the golden summer glow

We tended sheep in Arcady.

And hear the tender harmonyOf shepherd pipes that softly blow,Although ’tis but a memory.

And hear the tender harmony

Of shepherd pipes that softly blow,

Although ’tis but a memory.

Nor thought of any end had weAs through the grasses to and froWe tended sheep in Arcady.

Nor thought of any end had we

As through the grasses to and fro

We tended sheep in Arcady.

So, what if life now empty be,Of all the past this do we know,Although ’tis but a memory,We tended sheep in Arcady!

So, what if life now empty be,

Of all the past this do we know,

Although ’tis but a memory,

We tended sheep in Arcady!

As one who listens to the summer rainAgainst the roof when all the night is still,Save for the wind beneath the window-sill,Crooning its homely, comforting refrain,—And listening feels that neither joy nor painCan trouble now—only the faint sweet thrillOf drowsiness and peace and rest untilThe barque glides softly into sleep’s domain;So I, whose empty way leads wanderingBetween high garden-walls that hide the sun,Hear sometimes on the breeze a simple strainOf an old song you once were wont to sing—And then forgetting all, I seem as oneWho listens spell-bound to the summer rain.

As one who listens to the summer rainAgainst the roof when all the night is still,Save for the wind beneath the window-sill,Crooning its homely, comforting refrain,—And listening feels that neither joy nor painCan trouble now—only the faint sweet thrillOf drowsiness and peace and rest untilThe barque glides softly into sleep’s domain;

As one who listens to the summer rain

Against the roof when all the night is still,

Save for the wind beneath the window-sill,

Crooning its homely, comforting refrain,—

And listening feels that neither joy nor pain

Can trouble now—only the faint sweet thrill

Of drowsiness and peace and rest until

The barque glides softly into sleep’s domain;

So I, whose empty way leads wanderingBetween high garden-walls that hide the sun,Hear sometimes on the breeze a simple strainOf an old song you once were wont to sing—And then forgetting all, I seem as oneWho listens spell-bound to the summer rain.

So I, whose empty way leads wandering

Between high garden-walls that hide the sun,

Hear sometimes on the breeze a simple strain

Of an old song you once were wont to sing—

And then forgetting all, I seem as one

Who listens spell-bound to the summer rain.

A little stone o’ercrept with moss,And red wild roses flaunting by,A wistful breeze that seems to sighWhere the tall grasses toss.To sigh for one who went away,Thus it is writ upon the stone—Nothing can ever make atoneAnd tears shall fall for aye.Oh, irony of human vow,Even the stone is crumbling too,And tears,—none save the evening dew,For who remembers now?

A little stone o’ercrept with moss,And red wild roses flaunting by,A wistful breeze that seems to sighWhere the tall grasses toss.

A little stone o’ercrept with moss,

And red wild roses flaunting by,

A wistful breeze that seems to sigh

Where the tall grasses toss.

To sigh for one who went away,Thus it is writ upon the stone—Nothing can ever make atoneAnd tears shall fall for aye.

To sigh for one who went away,

Thus it is writ upon the stone—

Nothing can ever make atone

And tears shall fall for aye.

Oh, irony of human vow,Even the stone is crumbling too,And tears,—none save the evening dew,For who remembers now?

Oh, irony of human vow,

Even the stone is crumbling too,

And tears,—none save the evening dew,

For who remembers now?

A year, a year, and then to missThat which was all in all for aye;O Love as fleeting as your kiss,O Love forever and a day,To this.How such a change in one short year,I cannot, cannot understand;Oh, why to cast upon Love’s bier,Whose name was written in the sand,This tear?Why, when the fields were red with MayWhen you and I together swore;Is May so very far away,Was all so different then, beforeToday?And did the gods above then smileWhen we believed that love would last,Counting its heart-beats on the dialOf hours that have too soon slipped past,The while.Two boats upon a sea of glass—A little strength, a little trust;Yet let the hand of Fate but pass,Could they withstand the storm-cloud’s gust,Alas!So, though not knowing, yet must IForget one day and feel no moreYour love, which dreamed not e’er to die.Thank God for that—I close my door.Good-bye.

A year, a year, and then to missThat which was all in all for aye;O Love as fleeting as your kiss,O Love forever and a day,To this.

A year, a year, and then to miss

That which was all in all for aye;

O Love as fleeting as your kiss,

O Love forever and a day,

To this.

How such a change in one short year,I cannot, cannot understand;Oh, why to cast upon Love’s bier,Whose name was written in the sand,This tear?

How such a change in one short year,

I cannot, cannot understand;

Oh, why to cast upon Love’s bier,

Whose name was written in the sand,

This tear?

Why, when the fields were red with MayWhen you and I together swore;Is May so very far away,Was all so different then, beforeToday?

Why, when the fields were red with May

When you and I together swore;

Is May so very far away,

Was all so different then, before

Today?

And did the gods above then smileWhen we believed that love would last,Counting its heart-beats on the dialOf hours that have too soon slipped past,The while.

And did the gods above then smile

When we believed that love would last,

Counting its heart-beats on the dial

Of hours that have too soon slipped past,

The while.

Two boats upon a sea of glass—A little strength, a little trust;Yet let the hand of Fate but pass,Could they withstand the storm-cloud’s gust,Alas!

Two boats upon a sea of glass—

A little strength, a little trust;

Yet let the hand of Fate but pass,

Could they withstand the storm-cloud’s gust,

Alas!

So, though not knowing, yet must IForget one day and feel no moreYour love, which dreamed not e’er to die.Thank God for that—I close my door.Good-bye.

So, though not knowing, yet must I

Forget one day and feel no more

Your love, which dreamed not e’er to die.

Thank God for that—I close my door.

Good-bye.

The day is done and every hour is spentAnd now it lies a-dying in the west,Yet with what wonder those last moments blestCrown all with the chaste kiss of sweet content;For nature’s minstrels sing a carol pentWith the soft music of the spheres suppressedIn one great strain—the while upon night’s breastThe dying day sinks down in languishment.And in those last faint breaths as ’twere in soothThe halo of some saint, a glowing lightOf purest gold streams through the darkened sky,A light more wondrous than the dawn of youth—For ’tis a flame cleft out the veil of nightFrom that eternal dawn that ne’er can die!

The day is done and every hour is spentAnd now it lies a-dying in the west,Yet with what wonder those last moments blestCrown all with the chaste kiss of sweet content;For nature’s minstrels sing a carol pentWith the soft music of the spheres suppressedIn one great strain—the while upon night’s breastThe dying day sinks down in languishment.

The day is done and every hour is spent

And now it lies a-dying in the west,

Yet with what wonder those last moments blest

Crown all with the chaste kiss of sweet content;

For nature’s minstrels sing a carol pent

With the soft music of the spheres suppressed

In one great strain—the while upon night’s breast

The dying day sinks down in languishment.

And in those last faint breaths as ’twere in soothThe halo of some saint, a glowing lightOf purest gold streams through the darkened sky,A light more wondrous than the dawn of youth—For ’tis a flame cleft out the veil of nightFrom that eternal dawn that ne’er can die!

And in those last faint breaths as ’twere in sooth

The halo of some saint, a glowing light

Of purest gold streams through the darkened sky,

A light more wondrous than the dawn of youth—

For ’tis a flame cleft out the veil of night

From that eternal dawn that ne’er can die!

If you were not awayThese trees, this south-wind and this dreary dayWould all be mad with joyous ecstasy;But you are gone, so mourning they with meFind bitter-sweet in idle fantasy.How glad, how mad, how gay,If you were not away!

If you were not away

These trees, this south-wind and this dreary day

Would all be mad with joyous ecstasy;

But you are gone, so mourning they with me

Find bitter-sweet in idle fantasy.

How glad, how mad, how gay,

If you were not away!

Sometimes from out the rush of pulsing days,These days whose poetry was lost in proseSo long ago, left desolate on thoseFar childhood paths—yet, sometimes from the hazeOf half-forgotten years, fall on our waysNow drear, a strain of song, a June-blown rose.Ah, sweet, so sweet unto a heart that knowsThe memory of once-remembered Mays!Only a moment’s interlude, and yetHow the heart quaffs the draught that thrills and thrillsIts soul, finding again youth’s mysteries.What matter if tomorrow we forget—Today the stillness of the sun-lit hillsAnd the low drowsy hum of summer bees!

Sometimes from out the rush of pulsing days,These days whose poetry was lost in proseSo long ago, left desolate on thoseFar childhood paths—yet, sometimes from the hazeOf half-forgotten years, fall on our waysNow drear, a strain of song, a June-blown rose.Ah, sweet, so sweet unto a heart that knowsThe memory of once-remembered Mays!

Sometimes from out the rush of pulsing days,

These days whose poetry was lost in prose

So long ago, left desolate on those

Far childhood paths—yet, sometimes from the haze

Of half-forgotten years, fall on our ways

Now drear, a strain of song, a June-blown rose.

Ah, sweet, so sweet unto a heart that knows

The memory of once-remembered Mays!

Only a moment’s interlude, and yetHow the heart quaffs the draught that thrills and thrillsIts soul, finding again youth’s mysteries.What matter if tomorrow we forget—Today the stillness of the sun-lit hillsAnd the low drowsy hum of summer bees!

Only a moment’s interlude, and yet

How the heart quaffs the draught that thrills and thrills

Its soul, finding again youth’s mysteries.

What matter if tomorrow we forget—

Today the stillness of the sun-lit hills

And the low drowsy hum of summer bees!

To you, dear heart, whom I have never knownI sing my little songs all wonderinglyThat sometime you may hear,—the sweet atoneFor all the years and years of search alone—That sometime you may hear and come to me.So on I go a-singing down my wayWith ne’er a thought of all the journey past,For this I know—that on one perfect dayWhen everything is, oh, so glad and gay,You’ll hear and come and claim your own, at last.

To you, dear heart, whom I have never knownI sing my little songs all wonderinglyThat sometime you may hear,—the sweet atoneFor all the years and years of search alone—That sometime you may hear and come to me.

To you, dear heart, whom I have never known

I sing my little songs all wonderingly

That sometime you may hear,—the sweet atone

For all the years and years of search alone—

That sometime you may hear and come to me.

So on I go a-singing down my wayWith ne’er a thought of all the journey past,For this I know—that on one perfect dayWhen everything is, oh, so glad and gay,You’ll hear and come and claim your own, at last.

So on I go a-singing down my way

With ne’er a thought of all the journey past,

For this I know—that on one perfect day

When everything is, oh, so glad and gay,

You’ll hear and come and claim your own, at last.

When twilight falls and all the land is still,The purple shadows steal across the hill,And one lone star above a pine-tree’s crestShines ever brighter, while from out its nestThere breaks the low cry of the whip-poor-will.And softly grows the ladened hush untilE’en winds list o’er the fields of daffodilThey all day wafted,—’tis so sweet to restWhen twilight falls.Let not one drop of this rare nectar spill,But with the beryl wine your goblet fill.Drink with me, Love, the golden of the west,For all is made for love and love is best,—And, oh, the wonder of the moment’s thrillWhen twilight falls!

When twilight falls and all the land is still,The purple shadows steal across the hill,And one lone star above a pine-tree’s crestShines ever brighter, while from out its nestThere breaks the low cry of the whip-poor-will.

When twilight falls and all the land is still,

The purple shadows steal across the hill,

And one lone star above a pine-tree’s crest

Shines ever brighter, while from out its nest

There breaks the low cry of the whip-poor-will.

And softly grows the ladened hush untilE’en winds list o’er the fields of daffodilThey all day wafted,—’tis so sweet to restWhen twilight falls.

And softly grows the ladened hush until

E’en winds list o’er the fields of daffodil

They all day wafted,—’tis so sweet to rest

When twilight falls.

Let not one drop of this rare nectar spill,But with the beryl wine your goblet fill.Drink with me, Love, the golden of the west,For all is made for love and love is best,—And, oh, the wonder of the moment’s thrillWhen twilight falls!

Let not one drop of this rare nectar spill,

But with the beryl wine your goblet fill.

Drink with me, Love, the golden of the west,

For all is made for love and love is best,—

And, oh, the wonder of the moment’s thrill

When twilight falls!

For one great Queen who sits in majesty,Untouched, austere, upon a golden throne,The like whose loveliness was never knownOf ebony and rose and ivory,—For her you weave a broidered tapestry,Rife with rich stains of every color-toneInwrought; while she immovable as stoneBut watches pitiless and silently.Yet, should this Queen of Beauty lift her armAnd take your broidered web,—ah, then the prize,The vast reward of all the scars and shame,For in the moment as a mystic charmThe cloth is changed to porphyry, and liesForever on her breast a frozen flame!

For one great Queen who sits in majesty,Untouched, austere, upon a golden throne,The like whose loveliness was never knownOf ebony and rose and ivory,—For her you weave a broidered tapestry,Rife with rich stains of every color-toneInwrought; while she immovable as stoneBut watches pitiless and silently.

For one great Queen who sits in majesty,

Untouched, austere, upon a golden throne,

The like whose loveliness was never known

Of ebony and rose and ivory,—

For her you weave a broidered tapestry,

Rife with rich stains of every color-tone

Inwrought; while she immovable as stone

But watches pitiless and silently.

Yet, should this Queen of Beauty lift her armAnd take your broidered web,—ah, then the prize,The vast reward of all the scars and shame,For in the moment as a mystic charmThe cloth is changed to porphyry, and liesForever on her breast a frozen flame!

Yet, should this Queen of Beauty lift her arm

And take your broidered web,—ah, then the prize,

The vast reward of all the scars and shame,

For in the moment as a mystic charm

The cloth is changed to porphyry, and lies

Forever on her breast a frozen flame!

He never knew the golden thrall of youth,The ringing step, the rumpled wind-tossed hair,The reckless laugh untouched of pain or ruth,—Youth without pity and without a care.Not his the swift lithe strength that ever slays,And in its joyous slaying doubly sweet,Like some young god adown immortal ways,Crushing the blossoms ’neath unheeding feet.A twisted back, a face year-scarred and grim,A very mockery to love’s caress,These were the only birthright given him,—What should he know, except of ugliness?But in his fettered heart in longing pentA wealth of tenderness and, stranger too,Youth full of pity,—ah, the wonderment,—He never knew, and yet how well he knew!

He never knew the golden thrall of youth,The ringing step, the rumpled wind-tossed hair,The reckless laugh untouched of pain or ruth,—Youth without pity and without a care.

He never knew the golden thrall of youth,

The ringing step, the rumpled wind-tossed hair,

The reckless laugh untouched of pain or ruth,—

Youth without pity and without a care.

Not his the swift lithe strength that ever slays,And in its joyous slaying doubly sweet,Like some young god adown immortal ways,Crushing the blossoms ’neath unheeding feet.

Not his the swift lithe strength that ever slays,

And in its joyous slaying doubly sweet,

Like some young god adown immortal ways,

Crushing the blossoms ’neath unheeding feet.

A twisted back, a face year-scarred and grim,A very mockery to love’s caress,These were the only birthright given him,—What should he know, except of ugliness?

A twisted back, a face year-scarred and grim,

A very mockery to love’s caress,

These were the only birthright given him,—

What should he know, except of ugliness?

But in his fettered heart in longing pentA wealth of tenderness and, stranger too,Youth full of pity,—ah, the wonderment,—He never knew, and yet how well he knew!

But in his fettered heart in longing pent

A wealth of tenderness and, stranger too,

Youth full of pity,—ah, the wonderment,—

He never knew, and yet how well he knew!

Where are they gone, and do you knowIf they come back at fall o’ dew,The little ghosts of long ago,That long ago were you?And all the songs that ne’er were sung,And all the dreams that ne’er came true,Like little children dying young,—Do they come back to you?

Where are they gone, and do you knowIf they come back at fall o’ dew,The little ghosts of long ago,That long ago were you?

Where are they gone, and do you know

If they come back at fall o’ dew,

The little ghosts of long ago,

That long ago were you?

And all the songs that ne’er were sung,And all the dreams that ne’er came true,Like little children dying young,—Do they come back to you?

And all the songs that ne’er were sung,

And all the dreams that ne’er came true,

Like little children dying young,—

Do they come back to you?

I know a quiet vale where faint winds blowThe silver poplar branches all awry,And ne’er another sound comes drifting bySave where the stream’s cool waters softly flow;Wild roses riot there and violets throwTheir perfume recklessly, the while on highGreat snowy clouds pillow the smiling skyAnd cast frail shadows on the grass below.All is the same, the summer stillness dreamsIn idleness across the sunny leas,Until for very drowsiness it seemsThe wind has gone to sleep within the trees—Yet we once laughed at what the years might bring,And now I am alone, remembering.

I know a quiet vale where faint winds blowThe silver poplar branches all awry,And ne’er another sound comes drifting bySave where the stream’s cool waters softly flow;Wild roses riot there and violets throwTheir perfume recklessly, the while on highGreat snowy clouds pillow the smiling skyAnd cast frail shadows on the grass below.

I know a quiet vale where faint winds blow

The silver poplar branches all awry,

And ne’er another sound comes drifting by

Save where the stream’s cool waters softly flow;

Wild roses riot there and violets throw

Their perfume recklessly, the while on high

Great snowy clouds pillow the smiling sky

And cast frail shadows on the grass below.

All is the same, the summer stillness dreamsIn idleness across the sunny leas,Until for very drowsiness it seemsThe wind has gone to sleep within the trees—Yet we once laughed at what the years might bring,And now I am alone, remembering.

All is the same, the summer stillness dreams

In idleness across the sunny leas,

Until for very drowsiness it seems

The wind has gone to sleep within the trees—

Yet we once laughed at what the years might bring,

And now I am alone, remembering.

Blurred is the moon in a yellow stain,And the clouds are flying before the wind,The leaves fall fast in a ghostly rain,—Summer is left behind.And left behind the long nights of June,When the lights were soft in the waters’ shine—Softer your lips when they first met mine—Blurred is the Autumn moon.Blurred is the moon in a yellow stain,And oh, for the warmth of your arms again!

Blurred is the moon in a yellow stain,And the clouds are flying before the wind,The leaves fall fast in a ghostly rain,—Summer is left behind.

Blurred is the moon in a yellow stain,

And the clouds are flying before the wind,

The leaves fall fast in a ghostly rain,—

Summer is left behind.

And left behind the long nights of June,When the lights were soft in the waters’ shine—Softer your lips when they first met mine—Blurred is the Autumn moon.

And left behind the long nights of June,

When the lights were soft in the waters’ shine—

Softer your lips when they first met mine—

Blurred is the Autumn moon.

Blurred is the moon in a yellow stain,And oh, for the warmth of your arms again!

Blurred is the moon in a yellow stain,

And oh, for the warmth of your arms again!

Within your hands you hold the wealth of years,Old Time,—yes, all the gold of yesterday,All of love’s sunshine and the bitter grayOf tears—oh, the great multitude of tears;For everything is yours within the spheresTo give or take, or break, or keep for aye,Nor heed you e’en one wild cry of dismay,But gather on until all disappears.Yet love is sweet and we are not so old,Nor did the gods mean us to separate.O Time you cannot take my love from me,Life has so much, so very much to holdFor each,—I must not dream it is too lateAnd that we’ll dwell no more in Arcady.

Within your hands you hold the wealth of years,Old Time,—yes, all the gold of yesterday,All of love’s sunshine and the bitter grayOf tears—oh, the great multitude of tears;For everything is yours within the spheresTo give or take, or break, or keep for aye,Nor heed you e’en one wild cry of dismay,But gather on until all disappears.

Within your hands you hold the wealth of years,

Old Time,—yes, all the gold of yesterday,

All of love’s sunshine and the bitter gray

Of tears—oh, the great multitude of tears;

For everything is yours within the spheres

To give or take, or break, or keep for aye,

Nor heed you e’en one wild cry of dismay,

But gather on until all disappears.

Yet love is sweet and we are not so old,Nor did the gods mean us to separate.O Time you cannot take my love from me,Life has so much, so very much to holdFor each,—I must not dream it is too lateAnd that we’ll dwell no more in Arcady.

Yet love is sweet and we are not so old,

Nor did the gods mean us to separate.

O Time you cannot take my love from me,

Life has so much, so very much to hold

For each,—I must not dream it is too late

And that we’ll dwell no more in Arcady.

I went back an old-time laneIn the fall o’ year,There was wind and bitter rainAnd the leaves were sere.Once the birds were lilting highIn a far-off May—I remember, you and IWere as glad as they.But the branches now are bareAnd the lad you knew,Long ago was buried there—Long ago with you!

I went back an old-time laneIn the fall o’ year,There was wind and bitter rainAnd the leaves were sere.

I went back an old-time lane

In the fall o’ year,

There was wind and bitter rain

And the leaves were sere.

Once the birds were lilting highIn a far-off May—I remember, you and IWere as glad as they.

Once the birds were lilting high

In a far-off May—

I remember, you and I

Were as glad as they.

But the branches now are bareAnd the lad you knew,Long ago was buried there—Long ago with you!

But the branches now are bare

And the lad you knew,

Long ago was buried there—

Long ago with you!


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