Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Only Daughter by Oliver Wendell Holmes
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The Only Daughter

    By Oliver Wendell Holmes



Illustration Of A Picture

    They bid me strike the idle strings,
    As if my summer days
    Had shaken sunbeams from their wings
    To warm my autumn lays;
    They bring to me their painted urn,
    As if it were not time
    To lift my gauntlet and to spurn
    The lists of boyish rhyme;
    And were it not that I have still
    Some weakness in my heart
    That clings around my stronger will
    And pleads for gentler art,
    Perchance I had not turned away
    The thoughts grown tame with toil,
    To cheat this lone and pallid ray,
    That wastes the midnight oil.

    Alas! with every year I feel
    Some roses leave my brow;
    Too young for wisdom's tardy seal,
    Too old for garlands now.
    Yet, while the dewy breath of spring
    Steals o'er the tingling air,
    And spreads and fans each emerald wing
    The forest soon shall wear.
    How bright the opening year would seem,
    Had I one look like thine
    To meet me when the morning beam
    Unseals these lids of mine!
    Too long I bear this lonely lot,
    That bids my heart run wild
    To press the lips that love me not,
    To clasp the stranger's child.

    How oft beyond the dashing seas,
    Amidst those royal bowers,
    Where danced the lilacs in the breeze,
    And swung the chestnut-flowers,
    I wandered like a wearied slave
    Whose morning task is done,
    To watch the little hands that gave
    Their whiteness to the sun;
    To revel in the bright young eyes,
    Whose lustre sparkled through
    The sable fringe of Southern skies
    Or gleamed in Saxon blue!
    How oft I heard another's name
    Called in some truant's tone;
    Sweet accents! which I longed to claim,
    To learn and lisp my own!

    Too soon the gentle hands, that pressed
    The ringlets of the child,
    Are folded on the faithful breast
    Where first he breathed and smiled;
    Too oft the clinging arms untwine,
    The melting lips forget,
    And darkness veils the bridal shrine
    Where wreaths and torches met;
    If Heaven but leaves a single thread
    Of Hope's dissolving chain,
    Even when her parting plumes are spread,
    It bids them fold again;
    The cradle rocks beside the tomb;
    The cheek now changed and chill
    Smiles on us in the morning bloom
    Of one that loves us still.

    Sweet image! I have done thee wrong
    To claim this destined lay;
    The leaf that asked an idle song
    Must bear my tears away.
    Yet, in thy memory shouldst thou keep
    This else forgotten strain,
    Till years have taught thine eyes to weep,
    And flattery's voice is vain;
    Oh then, thou fledgling of the nest,
    Like the long-wandering dove,
    Thy weary heart may faint for rest,
    As mine, on changeless love;
    And while these sculptured lines retrace
    The hours now dancing by,
    This vision of thy girlish grace
    May cost thee, too, a sigh.



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