University of Virginia Library


213

FOLDED DOWN.

We read together—here the book.
(Eyes tender-lidded, drooping, brown!)
The bees were in the roses. Look,
The leaf is folded down.
It is the story, dear and old,
Whisper'd forever warm and new:
The world is in its age of gold
When two are lovers true.
We read together: in the sun
The brooklet laugh'd through grass and flowers,
All birds were singing; two in one
We clasp'd the fragrant hours.
The poet's flower—the rose of Love,
Whence all our costliest honey flows—
Was rooted in the book: above,
Within our hearts the rose!

214

The poet's dream—the vision, Love,
For which all sleeping wake, I deem—
Shadow'd each page with wings: above,
Within our souls the dream!
We read of Loss that leaves the heart
A sea-shell on vague shores of fate,
Murmuring, dumb: there walk'd apart
A maiden desolate.
A sail shone in the horizon's gleam
Where the moon came—a twilight ghost,
The specter of a vanish'd dream
That haunts a lonely coast.
What spider from the rose you kiss'd
Crawl'd, that we read no more that day?
We learn in many an autumn mist
The brightness of the May.
I turn the page—behold the prize:
The years like funeral ravens flown.
The sail 's reflected in the skies;
The shell has lost its moan.

215

From shade to sun, to bliss from grief!
December's warm'd by gracious May;
Oh, fools! we miss'd the golden leaf.
I read alone to-day.
Is it a memory or a dream?
(Eyes tender-lidded, drooping, brown!)
In that sad poem, Life, I deem,
The leaf was folded down.