We met upon a crowded street one day, And for a fleeting space her glance held mine; But we were strangers, there was nought to say, So each passed on without a spoken sign. Her eyes were deep and questioning, yet kind, But were the eyes of one whose will was strong -- Of one who had a keen and eager mind, And made of life a brave and buoyant song. Strange, how this casual meeting stays with me, When things of far more magnitude have fled, And yet the thought of it will always be Something to cherish, though no words were said. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...FIRST FRUIT by ISAAC ROSENBERG HATCHING; FOR DAW AUNG SAN SUU KYI by KAREN SWENSON THE FLOWERS OF THE FOREST by ALISON RUTHERFORD TO THE DAISY (1) by WILLIAM WORDSWORTH ON HIS RETURN FROM SPAIN by THOMAS WYATT SEVEN SAD SONNETS: 3. THE WANDERING ONE by MARY REYNOLDS ALDIS BRUCE: HOW AYMER DE VALENCE, AND JOHN OF LORN CHASED THE BRUCE ... by JOHN BARBOUR UNSOPHISTICATED WISHES, BY MISS JEMINA INGOLDSBY, AGED 15 by RICHARD HARRIS BARHAM |