3942139Demeter and other poems — To Mary BoyleAlfred Tennyson

TO MARY BOYLE.

With the following Poem.

i.
Spring-flowers’! While you still delay to take
    Your leave of Town,
Our elmtree’s ruddy-hearted blossom-flake
    Is fluttering down.

ii.
Be truer to your promise. There! I heard
Our[errata 1] cuckoo call.
Be needle to the magnet of your word,
    Nor wait, till all

iii.
Our vernal bloom from every vale and plain
    And garden pass,
And all the gold from each laburnum chain
    Drop to the grass.

iv.
Is memory with your Marian gone to rest,
    Dead with the dead?
For ere she left us, when we met, you prest
    My hand, and said

v.
‘I come with your spring-flowers.’ You came not, friend;
    My birds would sing,
You heard not. Take then this spring-flower I send,
    This song of spring,

vi.
Found yesterday—forgotten mine own rhyme
    By mine old self,
As I shall be forgotten by old Time,
    Laid on the shelf—

vii.
A rhyme that flower’d betwixt the whitening sloe
    And kingcup blaze,
And more than half a hundred years ago,
    In rick-fire days,

viii.
When Dives loathed the times, and paced his land
    In fear of worse,
And sanguine Lazarus felt a vacant hand
    Fill with his purse.

ix.
For lowly minds were madden'd to the height
    By tonguester tricks,
And once—I well remember that red night
    When thirty ricks,

x.
All flaming, made an English homestead Hell—
    These hands of mine
Have helpt to pass a bucket from the well
    Along the line,

xi.
When this bare dome had not begun to gleam
    Thro' youthful curls,
And you were then a lover's fairy dream,
    His girl of girls;

xii.
And you, that now are lonely, and with Grief
    Sit face to face,
Might find a flickering glimmer of relief
    In change of place.

xiii.
What use to brood? this life of mingled pains
    And joys to me,
Despite of every Faith and Creed, remains
    The Mystery.

xiv.
Let golden youth bewail the friend, the wife,
    For ever gone.
He dreams of that long walk thro' desert life
    Without the one.

xv.
The silver year should cease to mourn and sigh—
    Not long to wait—
So close are we, dear Mary, you and I
    To that dim gate.

xvi.
Take, read! and be the faults your Poet makes
    Or many or few,
He rests content, if his young music wakes
    A wish in you

xvii.
To change our dark Queen-city, all her realm
    Of sound and smoke,
For his clear heaven, and these few lanes of elm
    And whispering oak.

Errata

  1. Original: One was amended to Our: detail