IT stands in a sunny meadow, The house so mossy and brown, With its cumbrous old stone chimneys, And the gray roof sloping down. The trees fold their green arms round it, The trees a century old; And the winds go chaunting through them, And the sunbeams sift their gold. The cowslips spring in the meadows, The roses bloom on the hill, And beside the brook in the pasture The herds are feeding at will. Within, in the wide old kitchen, The old folk sit in the sun That creeps through the sheltering woodbine Till the day is almost done. Their children grew up and left them, -- They sit in the sun alone, And the old wife's ears are failing As she harks to the well-known tone That won her heart in her girlhood, That has soothed her in many a care, And praises her now for the brightness Her old face used to wear. She thinks again of her bridal, How, dressed in her robe of white, She stood by her gay young lover In the morning's rosy light: -- Oh, the morning is rosy as ever, But the rose from her cheek has fled; And the sunshine still is golden, But it shines on a silvered head. And the girlhood dreams, once vanished, Come back in her winter time Till her feeble pulses tremble With the thrill of spring-time's prime. And, looking forth from the window, She thinks how the trees have grown Since, clad in her bridal whiteness, She crossed the old door-stone. Though dimmed her eyes' bright azure, And dimmed her hair's young gold, The love in her girlhood plighted Has never grown dim nor cold. They sat in peace in the sunshine Till the day was almost done, And then, at its close, an angel Stole over the threshold stone. He folded their hands together, He touched their eyelids with balm, And their last breath floated outward Like the close of a solemn psalm. Like a bridal pair they traversed The unseen, mystical road That leads to the Beautiful City Whose Builder and Maker is God. Perchance in that miracle country They will give her lost youth back, And the flowers of the vanished spring-time Will bloom in the spirit's track. One draught from the living waters Shall call back his manhood's prime; And eternal years shall measure The love that outlasted time. But the shapes that they left behind them, The wrinkles and silver hair, -- Made holy to us by the kisses The angel had printed there, -- We will hide away 'neath the willows When the day is low in the west, Where the sunbeams cannot find them Nor the winds disturb their rest; And we'll suffer no tell-tale tombstone, With its age and date, to rise O'er the two who are old no longer In the Father's house in the skies. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE SEVEN AGAINST THEBES: NEWS OF WAR by AESCHYLUS PEARLS OF THE FAITH: 64. AL-KAIYUM by EDWIN ARNOLD PEARLS OF THE FAITH: 93. AL-NOOR by EDWIN ARNOLD THE BALLAD OF ORISKANY by OBADIAH CYRUS AURINGER TO MR. BARBAULD, WITH A MAP OF THE LAND OF MATRIMONY by ANNA LETITIA BARBAULD THE POPPIES by AMELIA JOSEPHINE BURR |