Stanzas For Music

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I loved a little maiden
  In the golden years gone by;
She lived in a mill, as they all do
  (There is doubtless a reason why).
But she faded in the autumn
  When the leaves began to fade,
And the night before she faded,
  These words to me she said:
'Do not forget me, Henry,
  Be noble and brave and true;
But I must not bide, for the world is wide,
  And the sky above is blue.'

So I said farewell to my darling,
  And sailed away and came back;
And the good ship Jane was in port again,
  And I found that they all loved Jack.
But Polly and I were sweethearts,
  As all the neighbours know,
Before I met with the mill-girl
  Twenty years ago.
So I thought I would go and see her,
  But alas, she had faded too!
She could not bide, for the world was wide,
  And the sky above was blue.

And now I can only remember
  The maid—the maid of the mill,
And Polly, and one or two others
  In the churchyard over the hill.
And I sadly ask the question,
  As I weep in the yew-tree's shade
With my elbow on one of their tombstones,
  'Ah, why did they all of them fade?'
And the answer I half expected
  Comes from the solemn yew,
'They could none of them bide, for the world was wide,
  And the sky above was blue.'

© Robert Fuller Murray