Voices Of The Night

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"The tender Grace of a day that is past."

The dew is on the roses,
  The owl hath spread her wing;
And vocal are the noses
  Of peasant and of king:
"Nature" (in short) "reposes;"
  But I do no such thing.

Pent in my lonesome study
  Here I must sit and muse;
Sit till the morn grows ruddy,
  Till, rising with the dews,
"Jeameses" remove the muddy
  Spots from their masters' shoes.

Yet are sweet faces flinging
  Their witchery o'er me here:
I hear sweet voices singing
  A song as soft, as clear,
As (previously to stinging)
  A gnat sings round one's ear.

Does Grace draw young Apollos
  In blue mustachios still?
Does Emma tell the swallows
  How she will pipe and trill,
When, some fine day, she follows
  Those birds to the window-sill?

And oh! has Albert faded
  From Grace's memory yet?
Albert, whose "brow was shaded
  By locks of glossiest jet,"
Whom almost any lady'd
  Have given her eyes to get?

Does not her conscience smite her
  For one who hourly pines,
Thinking her bright eyes brighter
  Than any star that shines -
I mean of course the writer
  Of these pathetic lines?

Who knows?  As quoth Sir Walter,
  "Time rolls his ceaseless course:
"The Grace of yore" may alter -
  And then, I've one resource:
I'll invest in a bran-new halter,
  And I'll perish without remorse.

© Charles Stuart Calverley