FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   45   46   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   66   67   68   69  
70   >>  
ay hither then with all your old time grace, Child-voices, trembling from the uncertain keys; Play on, ye little fingers, touch the settled gloom, And quickly, one by one, my waiting buds will bloom. Ah me, I may not set my feet again In any part of that old garden dear, Or pluck one widening blossom, for my pain; But only at the wicket gaze I here: Old scents creep into mine inactive brain, Smooth scents of things, I may not come anear; I see, far off, old beaten pathways they adorn; I cannot feel with hands the blossom or the thorn. Toil on, sweet hands; once more I see the child; The little child, that was myself, appears, And all the old-time beauties, undefined, Shine back to me across the opening years, Quick griefs, that made the tender bosom wild, Short blinding gusts, that died in passionate tears, Sweet life, with all its change, that now so happy seems, With all its child-heart glories, and untutored dreams. Play on into the golden sunshine so, Sweeter than all great artists' labouring: I too was like you once, an age ago: God keep you, dimpled fingers, for you bring Quiet gliding ghosts to me of joy and woe, No certain things at all that thrill or sting, But only sounds and scents and savours of things bright, No joy or aching pain; but only dim delight. AN ATHENIAN REVERIE. How the returning days, one after one, Come ever in their rhythmic round, unchanged, Yet from each looped robe for every man Some new thing falls. Happy is he Who fronts them without fear, and like the gods Looks out unanxiously on each day's gift With calmly curious eye. How many things Even in a little space, both good and ill, Have fallen on me, and yet in all of them The keen experience or the smooth remembrance Hath found some sweet. It scarcely seems a month Since we saw Crete; so swiftly sped the days, Borne onward with how many changing scenes, Filled with how many crowding memories. Not soon shall I forget them, the stout ship, All the tense labour with the windy sea, The cloud-wrapped heights of Crete, beheld far off, And white Cytaeon with its stormy pier, The fruitful valleys, the wild mountain road, And those long days of ever-vigilant toil, Scarcely with sleepless craft and unmoved fron
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   45   46   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   66   67   68   69  
70   >>  



Top keywords:
things
 

scents

 
blossom
 

fingers

 
unanxiously
 
calmly
 
curious
 

rhythmic

 

unchanged

 

looped


delight

 

ATHENIAN

 

REVERIE

 

returning

 

fronts

 

wrapped

 

heights

 

beheld

 

Cytaeon

 

labour


stormy

 

Scarcely

 

sleepless

 

unmoved

 
vigilant
 
valleys
 

fruitful

 

mountain

 

forget

 

scarcely


remembrance

 
smooth
 
fallen
 

experience

 

crowding

 

Filled

 

memories

 

scenes

 

changing

 
swiftly

onward
 
artists
 

inactive

 

wicket

 
garden
 

widening

 

Smooth

 

beaten

 

pathways

 
uncertain