Ballads, Lyrics, and Poems of Old France by Unknown
page 31 of 97 (31%)
page 31 of 97 (31%)
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The first love, and the tenderest;
Do you remember or forget - Ah me, for I remember yet - How the last summer days were blest? Ah lady, when we think of this, The foolish hours of youth and bliss, How fleet, how sweet, how hard to hold! How old we are, ere spring be green! You touch the limit of eighteen And I am twenty winters old. My rose, that mid the red roses, Was brightest, ah, how pale she is! Yet keeps the beauty of her prime; Child, never Spanish lady's face Was lovely with so wild a grace; Remember the dead summer time. Think of our loves, our feuds of old, And how you gave your chain of gold To me for a peace offering; And how all night I lay awake To touch and kiss it for your sake, - To touch and kiss the lifeless thing. Lady, beware, for all we say, This Love shall live another day, Awakened from his deathly sleep; The heart that once has been your shrine |
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