Bliss Carman, et al., eds. The World’s Best Poetry. 1904.
VIII. Wedded LoveReunited Love
Richard Doddridge Blackmore (18251900)“I
As tender as we used to be
When I brought you the daffodil,
And you looked up and smiled at me.”
When youth was budding into bloom;
And now the flowers are gone to seed,
And breezes have left no perfume.”
Take such a crooked view of things,
Distorting this and that, until
Confusion ends in cavillings.”
Perceive the force of what I say;
As if I always reasoned ill—
Enough to take one’s breath away!”
The vision that enchanted me,
When all you did was perfect grace,
And all you said was melody?”
The image never quite foregone,
Combining, as of yore, in you
A Samson and a Solomon?”
The straws we split with temper’s loss;
Then seal upon your lips anew
The peace that gentle hearts ensue.”
And sunshine of the early days;
And banish to the clouds above
Dull reason, that bedarkens love!”