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1863–1952

III

George Santayana

Tears that in youth you shed, Congealed to pearls, now deck your silvery hair; Sighs breathed for loves long dead Frosted the glittering atoms of the air

Into the veils you wear Round your soft bosom and most queenly head; The shimmer of your gown Catches all tints of autumn, and the dew

Of gardens where the damask roses blew; The myriad tapers from these arches hung Play on your diamonded crown; And stars, whose light angelical caressed

Your virgin days, Give back in your calm eyes their holier rays. The deep past living in your breast Heaves these half-merry sighs;

And the soft accents of your tongue Breathe unrecorded charities. Hasten not; the feast will wait. This is a master-night without a morrow.

No chill and haggard dawn, with after-sorrow, Will snuff the spluttering candle out, Or blanch the revellers homeward straggling late. Before the rout

Wearies or wanes, will come a calmer trance. Lulled by the poppied fragrance of this bower, We'll cheat the lapsing hour, And close our eyes, still smiling, on the dance.

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III · George Santayana · Poetry Cove