Page:Last Poems.djvu/102

 Also He, for His own good reason— Though I care little how these things are— Gave me thee, in those few brief midnights, And that one solace He never can mar.

Ah me, the stars of such varying heavens Have watched me, under such alien skies, Lay thy beauty naked before me To soothe and solace my world-worn eyes. For one good gift to me has been given— A memory accurate, clear and keen, That holds the vision, perfect for ever In charm and glory, of things once seen.

So I hold thee there, and my fancy wanders To each known beauty and blue-veined place, I know how each separate eyelash trembles, And every shadow that sweeps thy face. And this is a joy of which none can rob me, This is a pleasure that none can mar— As sweet as thou wert, in that long past midnight, Even as lovely my memories are.

Ah, unforgotten and only lover, If ever I drift across thy thought, As even a vision unloved, unlovely, May cross the fancy, uncalled, unsought, When the years that pass thee have shown, in passing, That my love, in its strength at least, was rare— Wilt thou not think—ah, hope of the hopeless— E'en as thou wouldst not, thou wilt not—care! 90