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Dreams and Days: Poems by George Parsons Lathrop
page 15 of 143 (10%)
Ah, better at the elm-tree's sunbrowned feet
If he had been content to let life fleet
Its wonted way!--lord of his little farm,
In zest of joys or cares unmixed with harm.
_And the moon hangs low in the elm._

For, as against a snarling sea one steers,
He battled vainly with the surging years;
While ever Jessamine must watch and pine,
Her vision bounded by the bleak sea-line.
_And the moon hangs low in the elm._

Then silence fell; and all the neighbors said
That Walt had married, faithless, or was dead:
Unmoved in constancy, her tryst she kept,
Each night beneath the tree, ere sorrow slept.
_And the moon hangs low in the elm._

So, circling years went by, till in her face
Slow melancholy wrought a mingled grace,
Of early joy with suffering's hard alloy--
Refined and rare, no doom could e'er destroy.
_And the moon hangs low in the elm._

Sometimes at twilight, when sweet Jessamine
Slow-footed, weary-eyed, passed by to win
The elm, we smiled for pity of her, and mused
On love that so could live, with love refused.
_And the moon hangs low in the elm._

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