Page:Poems Craik.djvu/68

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50
A LIVING PICTURE.
Amused to hear us call each other thus,
And question us about the old, old days,
The far-off days, the days when we were young.

How distant do they seem, and yet how near!
Now, as I lie and watch you come and go,
With garden basket in your hand; in gown
Just girdled, and brown curls that girl-like fall,
And straw hat flapping in the April breeze,
I could forget this lapse of years—start up
Laughing—"Come, let 's go play!"
Well-a-day, friend,
Our play-days are all done.
Our play-days are all done. Still, let us smile:
For as you flit about your garden here
You look like this spring morning: on your lips
An unseen bird sings snatches of gay tunes,
While, an embodied music, moves your step,
Your free, wild, springy step, like Atala's,
Or Pocahontas, careless child o' the sun—
Those Indian beauties I compare you to—
I, still your praiser,—
I, still your praiser,—Nay, nay, I 'll not praise,
Fair seemeth fairest, ignorant 't is fair:
That light incredulous laugh is worth a world!
That laugh, with childish echoes.
That laugh, with childish echoes.So then, fade,
Mere dream. Come, true and sweet reality: