University of Virginia Library


119

XXVII. She is bright and young.

I

She is bright and young, and her glory comes
Of an ancient ancestry,
And I love for her beauty's sake to gaze
On the light of her full dark eye.

II

She is gentle and still, and her voice is as low
As the voice of a summer wind,
And falseness and fickleness have not left
One stain on her girlish mind.

III

I felt the wild dream creep over like sleep,
More strangely each day I stayed,
And in four short weeks my heart was bound up
In the heart of that high-born maid.

120

IV

O the stir of love and its beating thrills!—
I never had known its power;
So I shut my eyes and went down the stream,
And might have been there to this hour:

V

But she sung light songs at a solemn time,
And the spell was gone for ever;
And who shall say 'twas a trivial thing
That delicate chain to sever?