Page:The poems of Richard Watson Gilder, Gilder, 1908.djvu/129

Rh Among the haunts that each had thought his own

The looks that partings bring to human faces.

The black-heart there, that heard my earliest moan,

And yet shall hear my last, like all these places

I love so well, unloving lives from child

To child; from morning joy to evening sorrow—

Untouched by joy, by anguish undefiled;

All one the generations gone, and new;

All one dark yesterday and bright to-morrow;

To the old tree's insensate sympathy

All one the morning and the evening dew—

My far, forgotten ancestor and I.

AT FOUR SCORE

is the house she was born in, full four-score years ago,

And here she is living still, bowed and ailing, but clinging

Still to this wonted life—like an ancient and blasted oak-tree,

Whose dying roots yet clasp the earth with an iron hold.

This is the house she was born in, and yonder across the bay

Is the home her lover builded, for her and for him and their children;

Daily she watched it grow, from dawn to the evening twilight,

As it rose on the orchard hill, 'mid the springtime showers and bloom.

There is the village church, its steeple over the trees

Rises and shows the clock she has watched since the day it was started—