OF love that was, of friendship in the days Of youth long gone, yet oft remembered still, And seen like distant landscapes from a hill, Clothed in a garment of aerial haze, What need to sing? Yet real is each phase Of life; and Time, that brings all good and ill Of this our mortal lot, can never spill One drop of that full cup he fills and weighs. Ah, faces veiled that start from out the past! Ah, spectral images once swift and warm! Ye are but hidden by perspectives vast. To-day o'ermasters all. And yet each form Of life and thought, forgotten or aloof, Is woven through the soul's strange warp and woof. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE FACE ON THE [BAR-ROOM] FLOOR by HUGH ANTOINE D'ARCY THE PLOUGHMAN by OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES EPITAPHS OF THE WAR, 1914-18: THE COWARD by RUDYARD KIPLING THE GRAPE-VINE SWING by WILLIAM GILMORE SIMMS THE GREEN LINNET by WILLIAM WORDSWORTH THE SONG OF WANDERING AENGUS by WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS |