Loading...

Lost Treasure

THE autumn day steals, pallid as a ghost,
Along these fields and man-forsaken ways;
And o’er the hedgerows bramble-knotted maze
The whitening locks of Old Man’s Beard are tost.
Here, shrunk by centuries of fire and frost,
A crab tree stands where—lingering gossip says—
In ocean-moated England’s golden days,
Great treasure, in a frolic, once was lost.
 
Here—fresh from fumes of some Falstaffian bout,
When famous champions, fired by many a bet,
Had drained huge bumpers while the stars would set—
Beneath its reeling branches by the way,
Till twice twelve hours of April bloom were out—
Locked in oblivion—Shakespeare lost a day.

Other works by Mathilde Blind...



Top