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Poems (Gould, 1833)/Recollections

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For works with similar titles, see Recollections.
4693996Poems — RecollectionsHannah Flagg Gould
RECOLLECTIONS.
I wonder what they have done with the pine,Where the red-breast came to sing—With the maple, too, where the wandering vineSo wildly used to flingIts loaded arms from bough to bough,And if they gather the grapes there now.
I should like to know if they 've killed the bee,And carried away the hive;If they 've broken the heart of my chestnut-tree,Or left it still to survive,And its laughing burs are showering downTheir loosened treasures of shining brown.
And there was a beautiful pond, that stoodLike an ample azure vase;Or a mirror, embosomed in wild green wood,For the sun to see his face.Have they torn up its lilies to open a sluiceAnd let that peaceful prisoner loose?
Perhaps they have ruined the ancient oak,That gave me its grateful shade;And its own dead root in its bed is brokeBy the plough, from its branches made;Nor am I sure I could find the spotWhere I had my bower and my mossy grot.
And shall I go back to my first loved homeTo find how all is changed,Alone o'er those altered scenes to roam,From my early self estranged?Shall I bend me over the glassy brook,No more on the face of a child to look?
No! no! for that loveliest spot upon earthLet memory's charm suffice!But the spirit will long to the place of her birthFrom time and its change to rise;To soar and recover her primal bloom,When death with his trophy has stopped at the tomb!