THE Garland I send thee was culled from those bowers Where thou and I wandered in long vanished hours; Not a leaf or a blossom its bloom here displays, But bears some remembrance of those happy days. The roses were gathered by that garden gate, Where our meetings, tho' early, seemed always too late; Where lingering full oft thro' a summer night's moon, Our partings, tho' late , appeared always too soon. The rest were all culled from the banks of that glade, Where, watching the sunset, so often we 've strayed, And mourned, as the time went, that Love had no power To bind in his chain even one happy hour. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...EPISTLE TO MR. MURRAY by GEORGE GORDON BYRON THE PLOUGHER [OR PLOWER] by PADRAIC COLUM THE GHOSTS OF THE BUFFALOES by NICHOLAS VACHEL LINDSAY LESBIA'S COMPLAINT AGAINST THYRISIS HIS INCONSTANCY; A SONNET by PHILIP AYRES EXODUS 15. SONG OF ISRAEL FOR THE OVERTHROW OF EGYPT IN THE RED SEA by OLD TESTAMENT BIBLE |