I have seen her in gowns the brightest,
Of azure, green,
and red,
And in the simplest, whitest,
Muslined from
heel to head;
I have watched her walking, riding,
Shade-flecked by
a leafy tree,
Or in fixed thought abiding
By the
foam-fingered sea.
In woodlands I have known her,
When boughs were
mourning loud,
In the rain-reek she has shown her
Wild-haired and
watery-browed.
And once or twice she has cast me
As she pomped
along the street
Court-clad, ere quite she had passed me,
A glance from
her chariot-seat.
But in my memoried passion
For evermore
stands she
In the gown of fading fashion
She wore that night when we,
Doomed long to part, assembled
In the snug
small room; yea, when
She sang with lips that trembled,
"Shall I
see his face again?"
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