UNFORGOTTEN

WHERE the long pastures skirt the bay

And sober-eyed New England keeps

The leisure of its old-time way,

Among her buried kin, she sleeps.

Blown o’er by winds or heaped with snow,

That little mound and headstone rude

Is all that marks for us below

A flower of sweetest womanhood.

Twenty swift years of sun and shade

Have fleeted past, half unperceived,

Since her delightful presence made

Our lives seem worthier to be lived.

The dust of days, the sands of years

Have hidden her fair memory deep,

And eyes once blind with bitterest tears

Have long forgotten how to weep;

And death and love and life have whirled

To orbits new and strange since she

Who was the heart of that old world

Made room for these changed things to be.

Past her still resting-place all day,

With rush and flash and resonant roar,

The tide of travel takes its way

Along the bay-indented shore.

Shrill sounds the flying clamor, blent

With softer surge of dim-heard surf,

Across the orchard closes sent

To break upon her graving turf.

And hearts that loved her once speed fast,

Idly intent on shore and skies,

Nor turn to give a look or cast

A thought toward her where she lies!

It is the usual lot! We live

Too strenuously for long regret,

Too occupied and taxed to give

Our minds to perished pain; but yet,

Borne on the vibrant, clanging wheels,

I never pass that half-seen place,

But flashing o’er my memory steals

The vision of that sweet, lost face;

And my heart whispers low to her,

Across the distance dim and chill:

“Sleep softly, dearest, do not stir,

I love you—I remember still.”