(INSCRIBED TO G.L.FAGAN, ESQ.)
ACROSS bleak widths of broken sea A fierce north-easter breaks, And makes a thunder on the lea -A whiteness of the lakes.
Here, while beyond the rainy stream The wild winds sobbing blow, I see the river of my dream Four wasted years ago.
Narrara of the waterfalls, The darling of the hills, Whose home is under mountain walls By many-luted rills!
Her bright green nooks and channels cool I never more may see;But, ah! the Past was beautiful -
The sights that used to be.
There was a rock-pool in a glen Beyond Narrara's sands;The mountains shut it in from men In flowerful fairy lands;But once we found its dwelling-place -
The lovely and the lone -
And, in a dream, I stooped to trace Our names upon a stone.
Above us, where the star-like moss Shone on the wet, green wall That spanned the straitened stream across, We saw the waterfall -A silver singer far away, By folded hills and hoar;Its voice is in the woods to-day -
A voice I hear no more.
I wonder if the leaves that screen The rock-pool of the past Are yet as soft and cool and green As when we saw them last!
I wonder if that tender thing, The moss, has overgrown The letters by the limpid spring -Our names upon the stone!
Across the face of scenes we know There may have come a change -The places seen four years ago Perhaps would now look strange.
To you, indeed, they cannot be What haply once they were:
A friend beloved by you and me No more will greet us there.
Because I know the filial grief That shrinks beneath the touch -The noble love whose words are brief -
I will not say too much;
But often when the night-winds strike Across the sighing rills, I think of him whose life was like The rock-pool's in the hills.
A beauty like the light of song Is in my dreams, that show The grand old man who lived so long As spotless as the snow.
A fitting garland for the dead I cannot compass yet;But many things he did and said I never will forget.
In dells where once we used to rove The slow, sad water grieves;And ever comes from glimmering grove The liturgy of leaves.
But time and toil have marked my face, My heart has older grown Since, in the woods, I stooped to trace Our names upon the stone.