Page:A Sheaf Gleaned in French Fields.djvu/56

This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
IN FRENCH FIELDS.
25

Has touched me, and my winter lowers
Ere yet my spring has hardly flown,
A shrub in one day overthrown!
That had produced some common flowers,
But had too little sap to deck
Its branches thin with any fruit:
Fall, fall ye leaves, the world's a wreck!
And Hope no more hath room to shoot!
Veil from all eyes the mournful road!
Veil from my mother's blank despair
The place which must be my abode
To-morrow, and her sorrow spare.
But if towards the lonely lane
The maid I love should ever stray,
To weep when daylight softly dies,
With a slight rustle, wake again
My shadow underneath the clay,
And so console it where it lies.'

He said, and went. . . . and came not back.
The last leaf from the bough that fell
Signalled his last day on the earth.
Clouds in the heavens hung scowling, black,
When 'neath an oak of sovereign girth
They laid him in his lonely cell.
But she the loved one to the wood
Came never. By the cold grey stone
No sound is heard; the solitude
Is undisturbed save when alone,
The herdsman's steps, by chance, intrude,
Or hidden dove coos monotone.