Reminiscence
I
So you would leave me, little Rose?
Dear child, with all your mother's ways;
That look she had in girlish days,
The look that with your beauty grows.
II
Oft when you bring her to my mind,
Before my heart has time for pain,
In you she seems to live again,
As though no sorrow were behind.
III
And when that happy, trustful gaze
Meets him you love, yet more I see
Your mother as she looked at me:
It is her own dear, watchful face.
IV
And when he takes your hand in his,
There flits across your lips and eyes
Her own pleased smile of half surprise:
It seems not like departed bliss.
V
Ah! what a heart-locked memory stirs —
I look, 'tis she, and you are gone!
Yes, though so many springs have flown,
Her peace remains, our love is hers.
VI
She sees your arms my neck enclose;
She sees your lips upon my brow.
No truer hour of love than now
Awaits your heart, my happy Rose!
VII
How they come back those days of old!
And now that 'tis your wedding-eve,
Now that for other scenes you leave,
One happy legend shall be told, —
VIII
Told in this home, this sunny vale
That for long years has been our own,
Sacred in days that long have gone
To many another lover's tale.
IX
It was an hour like this, the sun
Was sinking, yet had far to go:
The richness of his overflow
Down river, wood, and pasture shone.
X
Two lovers in this porch had met
Where often they had met in play:
'Twas on this memorable day —
As though that sun had never set.
XI
These grey-mossed tiles still 'neath it scorch;
The glare and shade still side by side
Aslant the mullioned casements glide
From yon old gable to the porch.
XII
A youth has hurried from these walls —
He stops, as in a day-dream stands:
His shadow with fast-folded hands
As from yon stone sun-dial falls.
XIII
His eyes are full of one loved face
Sunk pallid in her fingers cleft;
The long-loved one who just had left
In timid haste his wild embrace.
XIV
The love that with her childhood grew
Had still to her unruffled clung;
Engaging, playful, ever young, —
And without change was ever new.
XV
Not its glad pastimes she disowns;
He drew her to a higher love;
But while the pale emotion strove
She fled from his impassioned tones.
XVI
Transparent isles of rushes bind
The rivers light with bars of green
That catch the water's blue between,
To where it darkens in the wind.
XVII
There lies his boat, and now the sun,
Still going westward with the stream,
Appears to tow him on his dream
As they advance in unison.
XVIII
Along the white and yellow meads,
Which buttercup and daisy share,
The crowding cattle idly stare
As he winds through the matted reeds.
XIX
But her loved image fills his mind,
And, ever gazing at him, screens
His eyes from those long-happy scenes,
As he drifts by them, nature-blind.
XX
The white-flowered weed whose tresses float,
Combed by the stream and water-waved,
Seems her bright hair in crystal laved,
Struggling to overtake his boat.
XXI
His sculls drip o'er the glossy wash:
The ripple of the mellow tide
He scarce feels o'er their edges glide;
He lists not for the thrilling plash,
XXII
But thinks, when last the tide he clove,
How bank-side elms before him flew,
And quiet lay the distant view
Of woodland hill where dwelt his love.
XXIII
His memory holds it as the stream
Holds all the shining summer round:
The sky, the woods, the very sound
Of cuckoos chanting in a dream.
XXIV
And how she loved the grey old bridge!
Those arches mirrored deep below,
That meet the pillars row to row,
Quivering from their ruffled ridge — .
XXV
Three tunnels open to the skies!
The tasselled mosses as they float,
Now still, now heaving with the boat
That passes while the vision flies.
XXVI
As melt, with all the watery heaven,
Those arches hanging o'er a sky —
So in the quiet of a sigh
The yearnings of his soul seemed riven.
XXVII
The far-off boom of yonder weir
Now rushes down the narrowed day:
Like sirens battling with the spray,
Once came its music to her ear.
XXVIII
The sun now trembles like a ball
Heaven-forged and glittering in its blast;
A pale green halo round him cast —
Half quenched behind the waterfall.
XXIX
White streaks are creeping through the shade;
The moon climbs up the poplar trees:
But a loved form of light he sees,
As if her spirit walked the glade.
XXX
Well might it be, as since hath seemed, —
So holy are the vanished years.
But then her cheeks were under tears:
It was on them the moonlight gleamed.
XXXI
Her sobbings at his bosom fall;
Fonder than words can tell, they say
Her heart was his, half love, half play,
But now all love she gives it all.
XXXII
'Twas she, your mother! While she hung
Her head, and hid her tears, and crept
To me, as one who, erring, wept;
Wept more the closer that she clung;
XXXIII
She seemed an infant in my arms —
Kissed me as would a child bereaved:
And then, as 'twere for joy, she grieved —
Her heart released from its alarms.
XXXIV
God bless you, Rose! That loving face —
Could she but see it! Well I knew
Her thoughts when last she looked at you,
Who now have grown up in her place.
XXXV
Ah, leave me, Rose! these memories stir
Depths that you may not dream of, child!
These tears till now your love has wiled;
Leave me, that I may think of her.
So you would leave me, little Rose?
Dear child, with all your mother's ways;
That look she had in girlish days,
The look that with your beauty grows.
II
Oft when you bring her to my mind,
Before my heart has time for pain,
In you she seems to live again,
As though no sorrow were behind.
III
And when that happy, trustful gaze
Meets him you love, yet more I see
Your mother as she looked at me:
It is her own dear, watchful face.
IV
And when he takes your hand in his,
There flits across your lips and eyes
Her own pleased smile of half surprise:
It seems not like departed bliss.
V
Ah! what a heart-locked memory stirs —
I look, 'tis she, and you are gone!
Yes, though so many springs have flown,
Her peace remains, our love is hers.
VI
She sees your arms my neck enclose;
She sees your lips upon my brow.
No truer hour of love than now
Awaits your heart, my happy Rose!
VII
How they come back those days of old!
And now that 'tis your wedding-eve,
Now that for other scenes you leave,
One happy legend shall be told, —
VIII
Told in this home, this sunny vale
That for long years has been our own,
Sacred in days that long have gone
To many another lover's tale.
IX
It was an hour like this, the sun
Was sinking, yet had far to go:
The richness of his overflow
Down river, wood, and pasture shone.
X
Two lovers in this porch had met
Where often they had met in play:
'Twas on this memorable day —
As though that sun had never set.
XI
These grey-mossed tiles still 'neath it scorch;
The glare and shade still side by side
Aslant the mullioned casements glide
From yon old gable to the porch.
XII
A youth has hurried from these walls —
He stops, as in a day-dream stands:
His shadow with fast-folded hands
As from yon stone sun-dial falls.
XIII
His eyes are full of one loved face
Sunk pallid in her fingers cleft;
The long-loved one who just had left
In timid haste his wild embrace.
XIV
The love that with her childhood grew
Had still to her unruffled clung;
Engaging, playful, ever young, —
And without change was ever new.
XV
Not its glad pastimes she disowns;
He drew her to a higher love;
But while the pale emotion strove
She fled from his impassioned tones.
XVI
Transparent isles of rushes bind
The rivers light with bars of green
That catch the water's blue between,
To where it darkens in the wind.
XVII
There lies his boat, and now the sun,
Still going westward with the stream,
Appears to tow him on his dream
As they advance in unison.
XVIII
Along the white and yellow meads,
Which buttercup and daisy share,
The crowding cattle idly stare
As he winds through the matted reeds.
XIX
But her loved image fills his mind,
And, ever gazing at him, screens
His eyes from those long-happy scenes,
As he drifts by them, nature-blind.
XX
The white-flowered weed whose tresses float,
Combed by the stream and water-waved,
Seems her bright hair in crystal laved,
Struggling to overtake his boat.
XXI
His sculls drip o'er the glossy wash:
The ripple of the mellow tide
He scarce feels o'er their edges glide;
He lists not for the thrilling plash,
XXII
But thinks, when last the tide he clove,
How bank-side elms before him flew,
And quiet lay the distant view
Of woodland hill where dwelt his love.
XXIII
His memory holds it as the stream
Holds all the shining summer round:
The sky, the woods, the very sound
Of cuckoos chanting in a dream.
XXIV
And how she loved the grey old bridge!
Those arches mirrored deep below,
That meet the pillars row to row,
Quivering from their ruffled ridge — .
XXV
Three tunnels open to the skies!
The tasselled mosses as they float,
Now still, now heaving with the boat
That passes while the vision flies.
XXVI
As melt, with all the watery heaven,
Those arches hanging o'er a sky —
So in the quiet of a sigh
The yearnings of his soul seemed riven.
XXVII
The far-off boom of yonder weir
Now rushes down the narrowed day:
Like sirens battling with the spray,
Once came its music to her ear.
XXVIII
The sun now trembles like a ball
Heaven-forged and glittering in its blast;
A pale green halo round him cast —
Half quenched behind the waterfall.
XXIX
White streaks are creeping through the shade;
The moon climbs up the poplar trees:
But a loved form of light he sees,
As if her spirit walked the glade.
XXX
Well might it be, as since hath seemed, —
So holy are the vanished years.
But then her cheeks were under tears:
It was on them the moonlight gleamed.
XXXI
Her sobbings at his bosom fall;
Fonder than words can tell, they say
Her heart was his, half love, half play,
But now all love she gives it all.
XXXII
'Twas she, your mother! While she hung
Her head, and hid her tears, and crept
To me, as one who, erring, wept;
Wept more the closer that she clung;
XXXIII
She seemed an infant in my arms —
Kissed me as would a child bereaved:
And then, as 'twere for joy, she grieved —
Her heart released from its alarms.
XXXIV
God bless you, Rose! That loving face —
Could she but see it! Well I knew
Her thoughts when last she looked at you,
Who now have grown up in her place.
XXXV
Ah, leave me, Rose! these memories stir
Depths that you may not dream of, child!
These tears till now your love has wiled;
Leave me, that I may think of her.
Translation:
Language:
Reviews
No reviews yet.