Page:Poems Proctor.djvu/151

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A TRUANT FROM EDEN.
135
Down the winding path he sped,—
So he was wont of old to play—
I could see his shining head
Bright the darkling boughs between,
As if a sunbeam glanced that way;
While I followed where he led,
Followed still, through gold and green,
By grove and walk, his dancing feet;
And as he ran, now fairy-fleet,
Now from some gloom emerging slow,
Still beckoning, still eluding me,
His cheek outvied the rose's glow,
His voice, the robin's minstrelsy.

And then, and then,—God pity me
That still my lonely days glide on—
I know not how, but he was gone!
Unseen, had vanished utterly!
Viewless as evening zephyrs pass
That softly sway the meadow grass;
Silent as April sunlight goes,
When a black cloud, relentless, throws
Its shadow over lawn and tree!
And calling, flying where he fled,
I passed the lilies, drooping, dead,
And, breathless, gained the vacant stair;—
The sun shone wan as winter moon;
A chill wind blew the rose-tree bare,
Strewing its blossoms o'er the stone;
And he was gone, and I alone,
As sharp the clock rang out for noon!