So trim it was. The yew-trees still, With pious care perverted, Grew in the same grim shapes; and still The lipless dolphin spurted; Still in his wonted state abode And still the cypress-arbour showed Only, ‚—as fresh young Beauty gleams From coffee-coloured laces,— So peeped from its old-fashioned dreams The fresher modern traces; For idle mallet, hoop, and ball A magazine, a tumbled shawl, Round which the swifts were flying; And, tossed beside the Guelder rose, "A place to love in,-live,—for aye, If we too, like Tithonus, Could find some God to stretch the gray, Scant life the Fates have thrown us; "But now by steam we run our race, "The time is out of joint.' Who will, For me, this warm old window-sill, II. "Dear John (the letter ran), it can't, can't be, For Father 's gone to Chorley Fair with Sam, And Mother's storing Apples,-Prue and Me Up to our Elbows making Damson Jam: But we shall meet before a Week is gone,“Tis a long Lane that has no Turning,' John ! "Only till Sunday next, and then you'll wait "John, she's so smart,—with every Ribbon new, Flame-coloured Sack, and Crimson Padesoy ; As proud as proud; and has the Vapours too, Just like My Lady;-calls poor Sam a Boy, And vows no Sweet-heart 's worth the Thinking-on Till he 's past Thirty. .. I know better, John! "My Dear, I don't think that I thought of much III. This was the matter of the note,— Dropped in an Indian dragon's throat, Deep in a fragrant closet, Piled with a dapper Dresden world,— Ah, heart that wrote! Ah, lips that kissed! Your simple old-world message! A reverent one. Though we to-day The artless, ageless things you say Starring some pure primeval spring, I need not search too much to find That feel upon me yet the kind, And see, through two score years of smoke, The pale, smooth forehead, silver-tressed; And still the sweet half-solemn look As when one shuts a serious book I kneel to you! Of those you were, Whom some old store of garnered grief, Peace to your soul! You died unwed— Despite this loving letter. And what of John? The less that 's said Of John, I think, the better. |