How strangely now I come, a man of sorrow, Nor yet such sorrow as youth dreamed of, blind, But life's last indigence which dares not borrow One garment more of Hope to cheat life's wind. The mountains which we loved have grown unkind, Nay, voiceless rather. Neither sound nor speech Is heard among them, nor the thought enshrined Of any deity man's tears may reach. If I should speak, what echo would there come, Of laughters lost, and dead unanswered prayers? The shadow of each valley is a tomb Filled with the dust of manifold despairs. "Here we once lived": This motto on the door Of silence stands, shut fast for evermore. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE HIGH TIDE AT [OR, ON THE COAST OF] LINCOLNSHIRE by JEAN INGELOW MUSIC; AND THE SAVAGE BREAST by FRANKLIN PIERCE ADAMS A COWBOY'S WORRYING LOVE by JAMES BARTON ADAMS BROKEN MUSIC by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH THE BALLOON MAN by JEAN M. BATCHELOR THE LOVE SONNETS OF PROTEUS: 34. REMINDING HER OF A PROMISE (1) by WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT TOWARDS DEMOCRACY: PART 3. TWIN STATUES OF AMENOPHIS III AT THEBES by EDWARD CARPENTER |