MY days are full of pleasant memories Of all those women sweet Whom I have known! How tenderly their eyes Flash thro’ the days—too fleet!— Which long ago went by with sun and rain, Flowers, or the winter snow; And still thro’ memory’s palace-halls are fain In rustling robes to go! Or wed, or widow’d, or with milkless breasts, Around those women stand, Like mists that linger on the mountain crests Rear’d in a phantom land; And love is in their mien and in their look, And from their lips a stream Of tender words flows, smooth as any brook, And softer than a dream: And one by one, holding my hands, they say Things of the years agone; And each head will a little turn away, And each one still sigh on, For love was little bold, And youth had store, and chances to be glad, And squander’d so his gold. Blue eyes, and gray, and blacker than the sloe, And dusk and golden hair, And lips that broke in kisses long ago, Like sun-kiss’d flowers are there; And warm fireside, and sunny orchard wall, And river-brink and bower, And wood and hill, and morning and day-fall, And every place and hour! And each on each a white unclouded brow Still as a sister bends, As they would say, “Love makes us kindred now, Who sometime were his friends. Thomas Ashe. |