Page:Poems PiattVol2.djvu/112

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
100
THE FLIGHT OF THE CHILDREN.
Till, suddenly, some timid tongue
Asks me if I were ever young.

Then, wild and beautiful like a bird,
Upon my shoulders youth alights;
Old music from its sleep is heard;
I linger in diviner nights;
A lonesome crescent cuts the sky;
Weird, windy shadows waver by.

One lily, yellow-withered, dead,
Reblooms and shakes old sweetness out;
One rose, from pages long unread,
Breathes its lost breath of love about;
From half-a-century of dust
One slighted hand is wanly thrust.

. . . Then my fair, dreary dream will pass—
No longer young nor old am I;
My fairies leave the dew and grass,
Out of the wind my fairies fly;—
My own sweet children sweetly say:
"You cry sometimes—when we 're away!"