Page:The Vow of the Peacock.pdf/321

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312
THE FORGOTTEN ONE.


I mourn o'er cold forgetfulness,
Have I, myself, forgotten less?

I've mingled with the young and fair,
    Nor thought how there was laid
One fair and young as any there,
    In silence and in shade.
How could I see a sweet mouth shine
With smiles, and not remember thine?

Ah! it is well we can forget,
    Or who could linger on
Beneath a sky whose stars are set,
    On earth whose flowers are gone?
For who could welcome loved ones near,
Thinking of those once far more dear,