The Poet’s Song to His Wife

by Bryan Waller Procter English

How many summers, love,   Have I been thine? How many days, thou dove,   Hast thou been mine? Time, like the wingèd wind   When ’t bends the flowers, Hath left no mark behind,   To count the hours! Some weight of thought, though loath,   On thee he leaves; Some lines of care round both   Perhaps he weaves; Some fears,—a soft regret   For joys scarce known; Sweet looks we half forget;—   All else is flown! Ah!—With what thankless heart   I mourn and sing! Look, where our children start,   Like sudden spring! With tongues all sweet and low   Like a pleasant rhyme, They tell how much I owe   To thee and time!

More poems by Bryan Waller Procter

All poems by Bryan Waller Procter →