Poems New and Old eBook

John Freeman (Georgian poet)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 177 pages of information about Poems New and Old.

Poems New and Old eBook

John Freeman (Georgian poet)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 177 pages of information about Poems New and Old.

THE NIGHT WATCH

Beneath the trees with heedful step and slow
            At night I go,
Fearful upon their whispering to break
            Lest they awake
Out of those dreams of heavenly light that fill
            Their branches still
With a soft murmur of memoried ecstasy. 
            There ’neath each tree
Nightlong a spirit watches, and I feel
            His breath unseal
The fast-shut thoughts and longings of tired day,
            That flutter away
Mothlike on luminous soft wings and frail
            And moonlike pale. 
There in the flowering chestnuts’ bowering gloom
            And limes’ perfume
Wandering wavelike through the moondrawn night
            That heaves toward light,
There hang I my dark thoughts and deeper prayers;
            And as the airs
Of star-kissed dawn come stirring and o’er-creep
            The ford of sleep,
Thy shape, great Love, grows shadowy in the East,
            Thine accents least
Of all those warring voices of false morn: 
            And oh, forlorn
Thy hope, thy courage vanishing, thine eyes
            Sad with surprise. 
Oh, with the dawn I know, I know how vain
            Is love that’s fain
To beat and beat against her obstinate door. 
            For as once more
It groans, she passes out not heeding me,
            Nay, will not see:—­
As when a man, rich and of high estate,
            Sees at his gate
(Or will not see) a famishing poor wretch,
            Whose longings fetch
Old anger from his pain-imprisoning breast,
Till sad despair his anger puts to rest.

THE HAUNTED SHADOW

Fair Trees, O keep from chattering so
When I with my more fair do go
    Beneath your branches;
For if I laugh with her your sigh
Her rare and sudden mirth puts by,
Or your too noisy glee will take
Persuasion from my lips and make
    Her deaf as winter.

O be not as the pines—­that keep
The shadow-charmed light asleep—­
    Perverse and sombre! 
For when we in the pinewood walked
And of young love and far age talked,
Their solemn haunted shadow broke
Her peace—­ah, how the sharp sob shook
    Her shadowed bosom!

ALONE AND COLD

Do not, O do not use me
  As you have used others. 
Better you did refuse me: 
  You have refused others. 
Better, far better hope to banish
A small child than, grown old,
Hope should decay, his vigour vanish,
  And I be left alone and
        Cold, cold.

Ah, use no guile nor cunning
  If you should even yet love me. 
Hark, Time with Love is running,
  Death cloud-like floats above me. 
Love me with such simplicity
As children, frankly bold,
Do love with; oh, never pity me,
  Though I be left alone and
        Cold, cold.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Poems New and Old from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.