In hours of respite from the strife That kills the careless joy of life, How often, friend, have you and I Lived o’er those golden days gone by, When eager hand and eager eye Against the humming salt sea-breeze Drove our light craft through breaking seas; Or when beneath enchanted woods We floated, where the shadow broods On still black waters, and delayed A little in the chequer’d shade To watch, far down the shining stream, The golden summer sunlight gleam On the green banks of storied Boyne. Ah, in those happy days how well Did wood and field and water join To weave the wild earth’s mighty spell! Gone, gone! and you are also gone, On dark tides that you sailed alone; And scarcely more for you than me Those days are done! O, morning sea, Where all the morning in our blood Sang, as we faced the glittering flood! O, bays the wild sea-murmur fills, And hot gorse-perfume from the hills! O, lonely places, echoing Haunted by timid foot and wing, I see you now but in a dream— Old days, old friends, we part, we part; Yet still your memory in my heart Lives, till the heart be dust; and then Beyond this realm of Where and When, Something of you shall linger yet, And something in me not forget, When all the suns of earth have set. |