There shall it shine
Under green boughs,
So long as May and June bring leaves and
flowers,
Couches of moss and fern and woven bowers,
Still thine and mine,
A golden house;
And, perchance, e’er the winter
that takes all,
I, there alone in the deep
listening wood,
Shall hear thy lost foot-fall,
And, scarce believing the
beatitude,
Shall know thee there,
Wild heart to wild heart pressed,
And wrap me in the splendour of thine
hair,
And laugh within thy breast.
The rose has left the garden
The Rose has left the garden,
Here she but faintly lives,
Lives but for me,
Within this little urn of pot-pourri
Of all that was
And never more can be,
While her black berries harden
On the wind-shaken tree.
Yet if my song a little fragrance gives,
’Tis not all loss,
Something I save
From the sweet grave
Wherein she lies,
Something she gave
That never dies,
Something that may still live
In these my words
That draw from her their breath,
And fain would be her birds
Still in her death.
II
The gardens of Adonis
Beloved, I would tell a ghostly thing
That hides beneath the simple
name of Spring;
Wild beyond hope the news—the
dead return,
The shapes that slept, their
breath a frozen mist,
Ascend from out sarcophagus and urn,
Lips that were dust new redden
to be kissed,
Fires that were quenched re-burn.
The gardens of Adonis bloom again,
Proserpina may hold the lad
no more,
That in her arms the winter through hath
lain;
Up flings he from the hollow-sounding
door,
Where Love hath bruised her rosy breast
in vain:
Ah! through their tears—the
happy April rain—
They, like two stars aflame, together
run,
Then lift immortal faces in
the sun.
A faint far music steals from underground,
And to the spirit’s ear there comes
the sound,
The whisper vague, and rustle
delicate,
Of myriad atoms stirring in their trance
That for the lifted hand of
Order wait,
Taking their stations in the cosmic dance,
Mate linked to mystic mate.
And perished shapes rebuild themselves
anew,
Nourished on essences of fire and dew,
And in earth’s cheek,
but now so wistful wan,
The colour floods, and from deep wells
of power
Rises the sap of resurrection;
The dead branch buds, the dry staff breaks
in flower,
The grass comes surging on.
These ghostly things that in November
died,
How come they thus again adream with pride?
I saw the Red Rose lying in
her tomb,
Yet comes she lovelier back, a redder
rose;
What paints upon her cheek
this vampire bloom?
Beloved, when to the dark thy beauty goes,
Thee too will Spring re-lume?