She died when I was wild and young, And I myself am old by now; And still her small, few shillings come, Like shoots from a severed bough. Though they have dwindled, year by year, Can I despise these tiny gains Worth little more than children's weeds Picked in the woods and kissed in lanes? Not while I think her spirit lives And, close beside me, understands The grateful love so long delayed In the kiss on her ghostly hands. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...FROM THE AGES WITH A SMILE by EDGAR LEE MASTERS THE TEN COMMANDMENTS by GEORGE SANTAYANA DEATH AND DOCTOR HORNBOOK; A TRUE STORY by ROBERT BURNS LOVERS' INFINITENESS by JOHN DONNE THE LONG WHITE SEAM by JEAN INGELOW |