James McCosh

Young to the end through sympathy with youth,
Gray man of learning, — champion of truth!
Direct in rugged speech, alert in mind,
He felt his kinship with all humankind,
And never feared to trace development
Of high from low, — assured and full content
That man paid homage to the Mind above,
Uplifted by the " Royal Law of Love. "

The laws of nature that he loved to trace
Have worked, at last, to veil from us his face;
The dear old elms and ivy-covered walls
Will miss his presence, and the stately halls

Youthful Age

Young men dancing, and the old
Sporting I with joy behold;
But an old man gay and free
Dancing most I love to see;
Age and youth alike he shares,
For his heart belies his hairs.

A Love-letter

You wished for a love-letter, Doctor—but then,
I know you to be most conceited of men;
You'll think I'm in earnest, I vow now I ain't,
For I would not deign to love even a saint.

You must never believe what the fair ladies say:
Take their nay for a yes, and their yes for a nay.
Like doctors, the darlings are very deceiving,
And most that they say is not half worth believing.

But now for my letter. How shall I begin?
If I say, my dear Doctor, that will be a sin!
And a love-letter without dear, darling, or dove,

Her Way

You loved the hay in the meadow,
Flowers at noon,
The high cloud's long shadow,
Honey of June,
The flaming woodways tangled
With Fall on the hill,
The towering night star-spangled
And winter-still.

And you loved firelit faces,
The hearth, the home, —
Your mind on golden traces,
London or Rome, —
On quaintly-colored spaces
Where heavens glow
With his quaint saints' embraces, —
Angelico.

In cloister and highway
(Gold of God's dust!)
And many an elfin byway

You know not how deep was the love your eyes did kindle

You know not how deep was the love your eyes did kindle
Within my soul, or how great was my suffering!
Bless my beloved! He wished to visit me, but could not
Come near me because of his tear-drowned eyes;
He feared the watchers, so he came to me quickly,
Taking all adornments off his neck, except his beauty:
I offered cups of wine to him: the wine was put to shame
By those honey-like lips, those pearly teeth!
His eyelids were at last vanquished by slumber,
Wine made him obedient to all my wishes;

Love

You close your book and put it down,
As one might drop a tiresome task;
And, with what tries to be a frown,
You turn and ask:

“How can you care one hour for me
Unless your love is all a sham?
‘Childish and cheap’—but can I be
More than I am?

“Your poet knows that love delights
Only its equals, near or far . . .
‘ We love the things we love ,’ he writes,
'For what they are.’ ”

You serious child, how can you place
Such utter credence in a song?
It is, I grant, a lovely phrase;

Address to Lady———, Who Asked What the Passion of Love Was?

I.

You ask me, What's Love? —Why, that virtue-fed vapour,
 Which poets spread over our longings, like gauze,
May do for a swain who can feed upon paper;
 But flesh is my diet, and blood is the cause.

II.

A delicate tendre , spun into Platonic,
 Suits the feminine fop,—whom no beauties provoke;
But the blood of a Welchman is hot and laconic,
 And he loves as he fights, with a word and a stroke .

III.

Yet, I grant you, there is a sweet madness of passion,
 A raptur'd delirium of mental delight;

Canzone: Of the Gentle Heart

Within the gentle heart Love shelters him
As birds within the green shade of the grove.
Before the gentle heart, in nature's scheme,
Love was not, nor the gentle heart ere Love.
For with the sun, at once,
So sprang the light immediately; nor was
Its birth before the sun's.
And Love hath his effect in gentleness
Of very self; even as
Within the middle fire the heat's excess.

The fire of Love comes to the gentle heart
Like as its virtue to a precious stone;
To which no star its influence can impart

Love Unchangeable

Yes , still I love thee! Time, who sets
His signet on my brow,
And dims my sunken eye, forgets
The heart he could not bow,
Where love, that cannot perish, grows
For one, alas! that little knows
How love may sometimes last,
Like sunshine wasting in the skies,
When clouds are overcast.

The dew-drop hanging o'er the rose,
Within its robe of light,
Can never touch a leaf that blows,
Though seeming to the sight;
And yet it still will linger there,
Like hopeless love without despair, —

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