Page:A Sheaf Gleaned in French Fields.djvu/229

196 From the depths of my soul rang echoes out long, Responsive and faithful to that siren song. Chimeras! Where are they? Asleep, ah! asleep By the church where we prayed, in graves dark and deep. The sole friends that greet me when here I return Are corn-flowers and roses with dews in their urn, All the rest, or nearly all, have left me and gone: I long also to sleep, but still journey on. The thorns on the road mock my rags as I pass, It seems bordered with tombs of loved ones, alas! I played for a time on my lyre; then I fled. No echoes. 'Twas dreadful to sing to the dead. Delirious, I dashed into fragments the lyre And flung them afar. Once could soothe and inspire Those bits sacred of ivory; once they were kept And valued as treasures. . . . I thought and I wept.
 * Still, O my Voulzie, I forgive thee, and sad

In my own life, would have thy life ever glad. To love me I need so a kind confidant, To speak gently to me some friend I so want; To be cheated with hope so eager I pant, That ere my eyes close to the light of the day, Ere my vexed spirit from the earth glides away, I fain would revisit—God grant that I may!— Thy bank as a pilgrim that visits a shrine. How glad I should look on the green bushes in line, So dear to my childhood; or sleep to the voice Of the wild whistling reeds; or haply rejoice Over the future reinvested with hues From the rainbow's bright arch, and fresh with the dews Of the morn—a vision of beauty serene, Thou paintest, while prattling green borders between, Deceitful and fair as of frost-work a scene.