I SAW him steal the light away That haunted in her eye: It went so gently none could say More than that it was there one day And missing by-and-by. I watched her longer, and he stole Her lily tincts and rose; All her young sprightliness of soul Next fell beneath his cold control, And disappeared like those. I asked: 'Why do you serve her so? Do you, for some glad day, Hoard these her sweets - ?' He said, 'O no, They charm not me; I bid Time throw Them carelessly away.' Said I: 'We call that cruelty - We, your poor mortal kind.' He mused. 'The thought is new to me. Forsooth, though I men's master be, Theirs is the teaching mind!' | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SILVER by WALTER JOHN DE LA MARE SMOKING SPIRITUALIZED by RALPH ERSKINE CHRISTMAS TREES; A CHRISTMAS CIRCULAR LETTER by ROBERT FROST A THUNDERSTORM IN TOWN by THOMAS HARDY CATHOLIC HYMN by EDGAR ALLAN POE ST. AGNES' MORNING by MAXWELL ANDERSON THE STEAM-ENGINE: CANTO 10. THE RAILWAY BOOM, 1845 by T. BAKER |