THE SHEPHERD’S SONG.

Ah wherefore should I try to sing

Of Love that’s dead?

Of Love that came before the Spring

And ere Spring came had fled.

’Tis vain to seek in winter snows

The fallen petals of the rose

’Tis vain to ask the year to bring

The Love that went before the Spring.

Our little world was fair to see

Ere Love had come,

Of earth and sky and flower and tree

I sang while Love was dumb.

But now the strings have all one tone,

Love claims all beauty for his own.

In vain! in vain! I can but sing

The Love that went before the Spring.

And as I sing, Love lives again;

Where’er I go,

His voice is in the summer rain,

His footprints on the snow.

And while October turns to gold,

I dream that April buds unfold,

Ah tell me will the Spring-time bring

The Love that went before the Spring?

The Shepherd’s Song I have heard him say he was as well pleased with as with any of his later and more ambitious verse; but it is curious to note that, quite unconsciously, he repeated the line “But now the strings have all one tone” in the Lute Song, written nearly thirty years after, for The Beauty Stone, an opera done in conjunction with Sir Arthur Pinero to Sir Arthur Sullivan’s music.


The book of The Beauty Stone was published, but I quote the Lute Song for those who did not know it.