I find an old deserted nest, Half-hidden in the underbrush: A withered leaf, in phantom jest, Has nestled in it like a thrush With weary, palpitating breast. I muse as one in sad surprise Who seeks his childhood's home once more, And finds it in a strange disguise Of vacant rooms and naked floor, With sudden tear-drops in his eyes. An empty nest! It used to bear A happy burden, when the breeze Of summer rocked it, and a pair Of merry tattlers told the trees What treasures they had hidden there. But Fancy, flitting through the gleams Of youth's sunshiny atmosphere, Has fallen in the past, and seems, Like this poor leaflet nestled here, -- A phantom guest of empty dreams. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...TO DEAN-BOURN, A RUDE RIVER IN DEVON, BY WHICH ... HE LIVED by ROBERT HERRICK SONG BEFORE SORROW by LOUISE A. BALDWIN NATALIA'S RESURRECTION: 2 by WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT PRAISES OF WILTSHIRE by CHARLES WILLIAM BRODRIBB A VISION OF POETS by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING |