Classic and Contemporary Poetry
LOST GIFTS, by THEODOSIA (PICKERING) GARRISON Poet's Biography First Line: The years we spent together - what are they Last Line: The joy divine that might have been our own. Alternate Author Name(s): Faulks, Frederick J., Mrs. Subject(s): Grief; Love; Sorrow; Sadness | ||||||||
I. THE years we spent together -- what are they But blown dust on the wastes of yesterday? Yet should I find my joy I must go back, Seeking its fragments where the gray years stay. Who knows what ghost may come the selfsame track, Wistful, for that his live hand cast away? II The dream we dreamed together -- it is gone Like some frail rose a great wind falls upon, Destroying utterly. Yet I, in truth, Would give all golden gardens 'neath the sun For one torn petal from that rose of youth, And nowhere may I find one -- nay, not one. III Perchance that happiness we have not known Love now bestows on other lovers, grown More worthy of a gift left unpossessed. Those vagabonds met there beneath the blown May Moon to-night, may wear within each breast The joy divine that might have been our own. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SONOMA FIRE by JANE HIRSHFIELD AS THE SPARKS FLY UPWARDS by JOHN HOLLANDER WHAT GREAT GRIEF HAS MADE THE EMPRESS MUTE by JUNE JORDAN CHAMBER MUSIC: 19 by JAMES JOYCE DIRGE AT THE END OF THE WOODS by LEONIE ADAMS A BOOK OF CELTIC VERSE (TO SEUMAS MACMANUS) by THEODOSIA (PICKERING) GARRISON |
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