Debris eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 71 pages of information about Debris.

Debris eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 71 pages of information about Debris.

GOOD-BYE.

Good-bye!  Good-bye! 
Once pledged we fondly o’er and o’er
That nought should cloud our love’s bright sky;
Once thought we that we could not stay
Apart and live.  But oh!  For us
Fate willed it not to linger thus. 
To-day earth’s wintry poles apart
Are further not that we in heart,
Nor colder than our sunless way. 
Passion and pride can do no more,
And you and I can only say
        Good-bye!  Good-bye!

        Good-bye!  Good-bye! 
So sad it seems the sound of tears,
So sad it seems life’s parting sigh,
And yet, alas!  It can but be. 
Deserted ghostly wrecks of dreams
Once freighted with Hope’s golden gleams,
Wrecks drifting on a sullen sea,
To mock the memory-haunted years,
Are all now left to you and me. 
        Good-bye!  Good-bye!

IN THE TWILIGHT.

In the twilight gray and shadowy,
  Deepening o’er the sunset’s glow,
Softly through the mystic dimness
  Flitting shadows come and go.

As my thoughts in listless wandering
  With these phantom shadows fly,
Meseems they wear the forms of faces,
  Faces loved in days gone by.

One by one I recognize them
  As they silent gather near;
Some are loving, childish faces,
  Knowing naught of grief or care.

Some are blooming, youthful faces,
  Victory confident to win,
Some are from the contest shrinking,
  Wearied with the strife and din.

Some are aged, wrinkled faces,
  Time life’s sands has nearly run;
Not a leaflet spared of Springtime,
  Not a furrow left undone.

Other faces, sweet, sad faces,
  Wafted o’er the Lethean sea,
Radiant smile in twilight shadows,
  But they came not back to me.

In the twilight, dreamy twilight,
  When the sultry day is gone,
Quietly o’er vale and hillside,
  Tenderly as blush of dawn,

Come the timid evening breezes,
  Sighing through the Summer leaves,
Transient as thought’s pencil-paintings,
  Sweet as weft that fancy weaves.

And as shadows in the twilight
  Shapeful forms of faces wear,
So these dainty, light-winged zephyrs,
  To my hearing, voices are.

Voices whose sad intonations
  Seemingly, as flit they past,
Bring to memory hopes long shattered,
  Blissful dreams too bright to last.

Voices, merry laughing voices,
  Fondly loved in other years,
Mournfully are whispering to me
  That their mirth was drowned in tears.

Telling of a fairer fortune
  Far away ’neath tropic skies,
Telling of a broken circle,
  Scattered friends and severed ties.

Other kindly, loving voices,
  Winning in the long ago,
Tell me now, as then they told me,
  “Thou canst live for weal or woe.”

Are these weird and mystic voices
  But creations of the brain? 
Only in illusive fancy
  Must I hear their tones again?

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Debris from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.