Page:Complete Poetical Works of John Greenleaf Whittier (1895).djvu/503

Rh No critics these: they only see An old and kindly friend in me, In whose amused, indulgent look Their innocent mirth has no rebuke. They scarce can know my rugged rhymes, The harsher songs of evil times, Nor graver themes in minor keys Of life’s and death’s solemnities; But haply, as they bear in mind Some verse of lighter, happier kind,— Hints of the boyhood of the man, Youth viewed from life’s meridian, Half seriously and half in play My pleasant interviewers pay Their visit, with no fell intent Of taking notes and punishment.

As yonder solitary pine Is ringed below with flower and vine, More favored than that lonely tree, The bloom of girlhood circles me. In such an atmosphere of youth I half forget my age’s truth; The shadow of my life’s long date Runs backward on the dial-plate, Until it seems a step might span The gulf between the boy and man.

My young friends smile, as if some jay On bleak December’s leafless spray Essayed to sing the songs of May. Well, let them smile, and live to know, When their brown locks are flecked with snow, ’T is tedious to be always sage And pose the dignity of age, While so much of our early lives On memory’s playground still survives, And owns, as at the present hour, The spell of youth’s magnetic power.

But though I feel, with Solomon, ’T is pleasant to behold the sun, I would not if I could repeat A life which still is good and sweet; I keep in age, as in my prime, A not uncheerful step with time, And, grateful for all blessings sent, I go the common way, content To make no new experiment. On easy terms with law and fate, For what must be I calmly wait, And trust the path I cannot see,— That God is good sufficeth me. And when at last on life’s strange play The curtain falls, I only pray That hope may lose itself in truth, And age in Heaven’s immortal youth, And all our loves and longing prove The foretaste of diviner love!

The day is done. Its afterglow Along the west is burning low. My visitors, like birds, have flown; I hear their voices, fainter grown, And dimly through the dusk I see Their kerchiefs wave good-night to me,— Light hearts of girlhood, knowing naught Of all the cheer their coming brought; And, in their going, unaware Of silent-following feet of prayer: Heaven make their budding promise good With flowers of gracious womanhood!

my drift-wood fire I sit,
 * And see, with every waif I burn,

Old dreams and fancies coloring it,
 * And folly’s unlaid ghosts return.