COME back, dear days, from out the past! . . . I see your gentle ghosts arise; You look at me with mournful eyes, And then the night grows vague and vast: You have gone back to Paradise. Why did you fleet away, dear days? You were so welcome when you came! The morning skies were all aflame; The birds sang matins in your praise; All else of life you put to shame. Did I not honor you aright, -- I, who but lived to see you shine, Who felt your very pain divine, Thanked God and warmed me in your light, Or quaffed your tears as they were wine? What wooed you to those stranger skies, -- What love more fond, what dream more fair, What music whispered in the air? What soft delight of smiles and sighs Enchanted you from otherwhere? You left no pledges when you went: The years since then are bleak and cold; No bursting buds the Junes unfold. While you were here my all I spent; Now I am poor and sad and old. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SONNET: 13. OUT OF CATALLUS by GAIUS VALERIUS CATULLUS THE BIRD OF PARADISE by WILLIAM HENRY DAVIES ON THE RESURRECTION OF CHRIST by WILLIAM DUNBAR RECOLLECTIONS OF THE ARABIAN NIGHTS by ALFRED TENNYSON ENTERTAINMENT by JOSEPH BEAUMONT THE NAME by ANNA HEMPSTEAD BRANCH IF I WERE YOU by CARRIE BURRINGTON |