TWENTY YEARS.

BY THOMAS HAYNES BAYLY.

They tell me twenty years are past

Since I have look'd upon thee last,

And thought thee fairest of the fair,

With thy sylph-like form and light-brown hair!

I can remember every word

That from those smiling lips I heard:

Oh! how little it appears

Like the lapse of twenty years.

Thou art changed! in thee I find

Beauty of another kind;

Those rich curls lie on thy brow

In a darker cluster now;

And the sylph hath given place

To the matron's form of grace.—

Yet how little it appears

Like the lapse of twenty years.

Still thy cheek is round and fair;

'Mid thy curls not one grey hair;

Not one lurking sorrow lies

In the lustre of those eyes:

Thou hast felt, since last we met,

No affliction, no regret!

Wonderful! to shed no tears

In the lapse of twenty years.

But what means that changing brow?

Tears are in those dark eyes now!

Have my rush, incautious words

Waken'd Feeling's slumbering chords?

Wherefore dost thou bid me look

At you dark-bound journal book?—

There the register appears

Of the lapse of twenty years.

Thou hast been a happy bride,

Kneeling by a lover's side;

And unclouded was thy life,

As his loved and loving wife;—

Thou hast worn the garb of gloom,

Kneeling by that husband's tomb;—

Thou hast wept a widow's tears

In the lapse of twenty years.

Oh! I see my error now,

To suppose, in cheek and brow,

Strangers may presume to find

Treasured secrets of the mind:

There fond Memory still will keep

Her vigil, when she seems to sleep;

Though composure re-appears

In the lapse of twenty years.

Where's the hope that can abate

The grief of hearts thus desolate

That can Youth's keenest pangs assuage,

And mitigate the gloom of Age?

Religion bids the tempest cease,

And, leads her to a port of peace;

And on, the lonely pilot steers

Through the lapse of future years.

New Monthly Magazine.