Skip to Content
Indiana University

Search Options




View Options


Table of Contents



Poems . Craik, Dinah Maria Mulock, 1826–1887.
previous
next
page: 75

AT LAST.

  • Down, down like a pale leaf dropping
  • Under an autumn sky,
  • My love dropped into my bosom
  • Quietly, quietly.
  • There was not a ray of sunshine
  • And not a sound in the air,
  • As she trembled into my bosom—
  • My love, no longer fair.
  • All year round in her beauty
  • She dwelt on the tree‐top high:
  • She danced in the summer breezes,
  • She laughed to the summer sky.
  • I lay so low in the grass‐dews,
  • She sat so high above,
  • She never wist of my longing,
  • She never dreamed of my life.
  • But when winds lay bare her dwelling,
  • And her heart could find no rest,
  • I called—and she fluttered downward
  • Into my faithful breast.
page: 76
  • I know that my love is fading;
  • I know I cannot fold
  • Her fragrance from the frost‐blight,
  • Her beauty from the mould:
  • But a little, little longer
  • She shall contented lie,
  • And wither away in the sunshine
  • Silently, silently.
  • Come when thou wilt, grim Winter,
  • My year is crowned and blest
  • If when my love is dying
  • She die upon my breast.
previous
next