Oh, lost and unforgotten friend, Whose presence change and chance deny; If angels turn your soft proud eye To lines your cynic playmate penned, Look on them, as you looked on me, When both were young; when, as we went Through crowds or forest ferns, you leant On him who loved your staff to be; And slouch your lazy length again On cushions fit for aching brow (Yours always ached, you know), and now As dainty languishing as then, Give them but one fastidious look, And if you see a trace of him Who humoured you in every whim, Seek for his heart within his book: For though there be enough to mark The man's divergence from the boy, Yet shines my faith without alloy For him who led me through that park; And though a stranger throw aside Such grains of common sentiment, Yet let your haughty head be bent To take the jetsom of the tide; Because this brackish turbid sea Throws toward thee things that pleased of yore, And though it wash thy feet no more, Its murmurs mean: "I yearn for thee." The world may like, for all I care, The gentler voice, the cooler head, That bows a rival to despair, And cheaply compliments the dead; That smiles at all that's coarse and rash, Yet wins the trophies of the fight, Unscathed, in honour's wreck and crash, Heartless, but always in the right;. Thanked for good counsel by the judge Who tramples on the bleeding brave, Thanked too by him who will not budge From claims thrice hallowed by the grave. Thanked, and self-pleased: ay, let him wear What to that noble breast was due; And I, dear passionate Teucer, dare Go through the homeless world with you. |