The Vigil of Venus and Other Poems by "Q" by Sir Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch
page 77 of 90 (85%)
page 77 of 90 (85%)
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Yet there is one gives back to the winter grate
Gold of a sunset flooding a college building, Gold of an hour I waited--as now I wait-- For a light step on the stair, a girl's low laughter, Rustle of silk, shy knuckles tapping the oak, Dinner and mirth upsetting my rooms and, after, Music, waltz upon waltz, till the June day broke. Where is her laughter now? Old tarnished covers-- You that reflect her with fresh young face unchanged-- Tell that we met, that we parted, not as lovers; Time, chance, brought us together, and these estranged. Loyal were we to the mood of the moment granted, Bruised not its bloom, but danced on the wave of its joy; Passion--wisdom--fell back like a fence enchanted, Ringing a floor for us both--whole Heaven for the boy! Where is she now? Regretted not, though departed, Blessings attend and follow her all her days! --Look to your hound: he dreams of the hares he started, Whines, and awakes, and stretches his limbs to the blaze. Far old friend in the Manse, by the green ash peeling Flake by flake from the heat in the Yule log's core, Look past the woman you love. On wall and ceiling |
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