Page:The Sad Years.djvu/57



SHALL rest no more on the fragrant mosses Under great trees where the green bough tosses Scents of the lime; and the wild rose flinging Sweets to the breeze with their censer swinging, I shall count no more, as I linger lazy Deep in the mead, from the pink-tipped daisy, “Who loves me well, and who leaves me lonely? Who loves me not, and who loves me only?”

I shall walk no more by the great sea dreaming Secret dreams, with the black gull screaming, Child of the cliff and the wan wave falling, Songless he cries with no bird-like calling. I shall seek no more for the sea-shell's story By the wet sands in the sunset glory, Hear the sea call from the spiral hollow, “Soul who is seeking, dare you not follow?”

Whom have I loved, and who loved me only? I shall stand in the churchyard lonely, [49]