THE VACANT ROOM.

Ah, wraith-lit star, that shone afar,

And lured my eager footsteps on!

This door I pass, and find, alas,

The friend for whom I long’d is gone.

O think how drear mere sands appear

To travellers worn who pray for springs.

More drear this place without the face

I sought to cheer my wanderings.

Have diamonds rare no gleams to spare

The light that their own light would shun?

Do roses droop when many a group

Of clouds crowd off the autumn sun?

The gem and rose less dull repose

When all are gone that caused their worth,

Than lip and eye when none are nigh

With smiles that break in bursts of mirth.

Are lovers wild, when maidens mild

Their wisest ways of wooing shun?

Do mothers weep, when waked from sleep

Whose dream restored a long-lost son?

Ah, scarce the man’s or mother’s plans

Appear so rudely overthrown,

As his whose thought in vain here sought

A word to echo back his own.

But time speeds on, and duties wan,

Like ghosts untombed, forbid my stay;

But though I go, this note shall show

The loss, my friend, you cause to-day.

It craves a thought for him who sought

A sight of eyes that light it now;

For him who waits till kindlier fates

His hopes a kindlier fate allow.