A BALLADE OF OLD SWEETHEARTS

WHO is it that weeps for the last year’s flowers

When the wood is aflame with the fires of spring,

And we hear her voice in the lilac bowers

As she croons the runes of the blossoming?

For the same old blooms do the new years bring,

But not to our lives do the years come so,

New lips must kiss and new bosoms cling.—

Ah! lost are the loves of the long ago.

Ah me! for a breath of those morning hours

When Alice and I went a-wandering

Through the shining fields, and it still was ours

To kiss and to feel we were shuddering—

Ah me! when a kiss was a holy thing—

How sweet were a smile from Maud, and oh!

With Phyllis once more to be whispering—

Ah! lost are the loves of the long ago.

But it cannot be that old Time devours

Such loves as was Annie’s and mine we sing,

And surely beneficent heavenly powers

Save Muriel’s beauty from perishing;

And if in some golden evening

To a quaint old garden I chance to go,

Shall Marion no more by the wicket sing?—

Ah! lost are the loves of the long ago.