Page:Poems Denver.djvu/187

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THE WILLOW TREES.
181
When boughs so thickly interlaced would scarce admit a breeze,
To whisper of their loveliness—those weeping willow trees!

Those two old weeping willows that look'd so sadly down,
As if they mourned a brilliant gem, stolen from the earth's fair crown;
Their slender branches dipping in the clear, transparent wave,
And scattering all the drops around, as if 'twere tears they gave.

I see them now, as I have seen, in many a day gone by,
Ere memory hid them in her heart, 'mongst treasured things to lie,
When life first found me on its shore, a thing of light and love,
With dear Virginia's soil beneath, Virginia's skies above.

I see them, and that gray old house that stood so meekly there,
Where an aged couple dwelt, whose brows were furrow'd o'er with care,
With a lovely grandchild by their side, whose bright and laughing eyes
Lit their declining years, as lights the sun the evening sky.