Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THE SUMMER OF LONG AGO, by JOHN TROTWOOD MOORE Poet's Biography First Line: Do you know the land, the fairest land Last Line: In the summer of long ago. Subject(s): Love; Memory | ||||||||
DO you know the land, the fairest land In the mythical realms of old? Where the earth and the air, and the flowers rare All sleep 'neath a sun of gold? Where the elf-king's bugle in winding note Drowns the dreamy drum in the black bee's throat, And the fairy queen floats in her peach-bloom boat? The fire-flies dance where the lily-maids meet And the flowers are dreams that lie at your feet In the Summer of Long Ago. Do you know the land, the sweetest land, In the rhythmical realms of old? Where the moon and her beams bring the romancing gleams Of a love you never have told? Where the star king's horsemen in platoons of light Bring your soul-secret love on a palfrey of white, And her lips meet your lips ere she taketh her flight? The will-o'-wisp drops like a star from the sun, And the brooklets are poems that rhyme as they run In the Summer of Long Ago. Have you seen the queen of that beautiful land In the radiant realms of old? With eyes like the stars of the May-pop bars, And throat like the lily's fold? Queen of your home in that yet-to-be day, To hold you in bondage forever and aye, Yet to love and to cherish, to bless and obey And queen even now in a kingdom above The little sweetheart you first learned to love In the Summer of Long Ago. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...MEMORY AS A HEARING AID by TONY HOAGLAND THE SAME QUESTION by JOHN HOLLANDER FORGET HOW TO REMEMBER HOW TO FORGET by JOHN HOLLANDER ON THAT SIDE by LAWRENCE JOSEPH MEMORY OF A PORCH by DONALD JUSTICE BEYOND THE HUNTING WOODS by DONALD JUSTICE A HARVEST SONG by JOHN TROTWOOD MOORE A MEMORIAL DAY POEM FOR THE CONFEDERACY by JOHN TROTWOOD MOORE |
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