Adieu, kind Life, though thou hast often been Lavish of quip, and scant of courtesy, Beneath thy roughness I have found in thee A host who doth my parting favor win. Friend, teacher, sage, and sometimes harlequin, Thine every mood hath held some good for me,— Nor ever friendlier seemed thy company Than on this night when I must quit thine inn. I love thee, Life, in spite of thy rude ways! Dear is thy pleasant house, so long my home. I thank thee for the hospitable days, The friends, the rugged cheer. Then, landlord, come! Pour me a stirrup cup,—our parting nears: I ever liked thy wine, though salt with tears.
Departure
More from Poet
-
Sometime, when all life’s lessons have been learned, And sun and stars forevermore have set, The things which our weak judgments here have spurned, The things o’er which we grieved with lashes wet, Will flash before us, out of life’s dark night, As stars shine most in deeper tints of blue...
-
God pity the wretched prisoners, In their lonely cells to-day! Whatever the sins that tripped them, God pity them! still I say. Only a strip of sunshine, Cleft by rusty bars; Only a patch of azure, Only a cluster of stars; Only a barren future, To starve their hope upon; Only stinging...
-
A Little elbow leans upon your knee, Your tired knee that has so much to bear; A child’s dear eyes are looking lovingly From underneath a thatch of tangled hair. Perhaps you do not heed the velvet touch Of warm, moist fingers, folding yours so tight; You do not prize this blessing overmuch...
-
Or, Blessings of To-day IF we knew the woe and heart-ache That await us on the road; If our lips could taste the wormwood, If our backs could feel the load; Would we waste to-day in wishing For a time that ne’er may be? Would we wait in such impatience For our ships to come from sea? If...
-
Adieu, kind Life, though thou hast often been Lavish of quip, and scant of courtesy, Beneath thy roughness I have found in thee A host who doth my parting favor win. Friend, teacher, sage, and sometimes harlequin, Thine every mood hath held some good for me,— Nor ever friendlier seemed thy...