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Poems (Terry, 1861)/Fastrada's ring

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Poems
by Rose Terry Cooke
Fastrada's ring
4603995Poems — Fastrada's ringRose Terry Cooke
FASTRADA'S RING.
"Stretch out thy hand, insatiate Time!Keeper of keys, restore to meSome gift that in the gray Earth's primeHer happy children held of thee;Some signet of that mysteryThy footsteps trample into death,Some score of that strange harmonyThat sings in every breath."
So sung I on an autumn-day,Sitting in silence, golden, clear,When even the mild winds seemed to prayBeside the slowly dying year,And the old conqueror stopped to hear;For, like the echo of a bell,I heard him speak, in accents clear:"Choose! and thy wise choice tell!"
Then all my vanishing desires,The threads of hope and joy and pain, Long burned in life's consuming fires,Came glittering into life again,And, gathered as a summer rainInto the rainbow's bended wing,Cried, with one voice of longing vain:"Give me Fastrada's ring!
"Give me that talisman of peaceShe wore upon her finger white,Then shall the weary visions cease,That haunt me all the lingering night;The world shall blossom with delight,And birds of heaven about me sing;Ah! fill these darkened eyes with light!Give me Fastrada's ring!
"Give me no jewels from thy store,No learned scrolls; no gems of art;My eager wishes grasp at more:Sleep for a worn and wretched heart;A draught to melt these lips apart,Sealed with such thirst as death-pains bring;Love,—life's sole rest and better part,Give me Fastrada's ring!"