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The Bibelot

VOLUME X

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From The Bibelot, A Reprint of Poetry and Prose for Book Lovers, chosen in part from scarce editions and sources not generally known, Volume X, Testimonial Edition, Edited and Originally Published by Thomas B. Mosher, Portland, Maine; Wm. Wise & Co.; New York; 1904; pp. 73-4.

III. POEMS BY LIONEL JOHNSON.




73

HAWTHORNE.

To Walter Alison Phillips.

TEN years ago I heard: ten, have I loved;
Thine haunting voice borne over the waste sea.
Was it thy melancholy spirit moved
Mine, with those gray dreams, that invested thee?
Or was it, that thy beauty first reproved
The imperfect fancies, that looked fair to me?


Thou has both secrets: for to thee are known
The fatal sorrows binding life and death:
And thou hast found, on wings of passage blown,
That music, which is sorrow’s perfect breath:
So, all thy beauty takes a solemn tone,
And art, is all thy melancholy saith.


Now therefore is thy voice abroad for me,
When through dark woodlands murmuring sounds make
            way:
Thy voice, and voices of the sounding sea,
Stir in the branches, as none other may:
All pensive loneliness is full of thee,
And each mysterious, each autumnal day.


Hesperian soul! Well hadst thou in the West
Thine hermitage and meditative place:
74 In mild, retiring fields thou wast at rest,
Calmed by old winds, touched with aërial grace:
Fields, whence old magic simples filled thy breast,
And unforgotten fragrance balmed thy face.

1889.











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