Envoi
Princess, that all this craft of moonlight
threw
Across my path, this deep
immortal smart
Shall still burn on when winds my ashes
strew:
A woman—and yet
how much more thou art!
The magic flower
You bear a flower in your hand,
You softly take it through
the air,
Lest it should be too roughly fanned,
And break and fall, for all
your care.
Love is like that, the lightest breath
Shakes all its blossoms o’er
the land,
And its mysterious cousin, Death,
Waits but to snatch it from
your hand.
O some day, should your hand forget,
Your guardian eyes stray otherwhere,
Your cheeks shall all in vain be wet,
Vain all your penance and
your prayer.
God gave you once this creature fair,
You two mysteriously met;
By Time’s strange stream
There stood this Dream,
This lovely Immortality
Given your mortal eyes to see,
That might have been your
darling yet;
But in the place
Of her strange face
Sorrow will stand forever
more,
And Sorrow’s hand be on your brow,
And vainly you shall watch
the door
For her so lightly with you now,
And all the world be as before.
Ah; Spring shall sing and Summer bloom,
And flowers fill Life’s empty room,
And all the singers sing in
vain,
Nor bring you back your flower
again.
O have a care!—for this is
all:
Let not your magic blossom fall.
Ballade of love’s cloister
Had I the gold that some so vainly spend,
For my lost loves a temple
would I raise,
A shrine for each dear name: there
should ascend
Incense for ever, and hymns
of golden praise;
And I would live the remnant
of my days,
Where hallowed windows cast their painted
gleams,
At prayer before each consecrated
face,
Kneeling within that cloister of old dreams.
And each fair altar, like a priest, I’d
tend,
Trimming the tapers to a constant
blaze,
And to each lovely and beloved friend
Garlands I’d bring,
and virginal soft sprays
From April’s bodice,
and moon-breasted May’s,
And there should be a sound for ever of
streams
And birds ’mid happy
leaves in that still place,—
Kneeling within that cloister of old dreams.
O’er missals of hushed memories
would I bend,
And thrilling scripts of bosom-scented
phrase,
Telling of love that never hath an end,
And sacred relics of wonder-working
grace,
Strands of bright hair, and
tender webs of lace,
Press to my lips—until the
Present seems
The Past again to my ensorcelled
gaze,—
Kneeling within that cloister of old dreams.
Envoi
Princesses unforgot, your lover lays
His heart upon your altars,
and he deems
He treads again the fair love-haunted
ways—
Kneeling within that cloister
of old dreams.