



 


|
Selected
Poems
by
Frederick George Scott
|
OLD
LETTERS
|
|
The
house was silent, and the light
Was fading from the western
glow;
I read, till tears had dimmed my sight,
Some letters written long
ago.
The voices that have passed away,
|
5 |
The
faces that have turned to mould,
Were round me in the room to-day,
And laughed and chatted
as of old.
The thoughts that youth was wont to think,
The hopes now dead for
evermore,
|
10 |
Came
from the lines of faded ink,
As sweet and earnest as
of yore.
I laid
the letters by and dreamed
The dear, dead past to
life again;
The present and its purpose seemed
|
15 |
|
A fading vision full of
pain.
Then,
with a sudden shout of glee,
The children burst into
the room,
Their little faces were to me
As sunrise in the cloud
of gloom.
|
20 |
The world was full of meaning still,
For love will live though
loved ones die;
I turned upon life’s darkened hill
And gloried in the morning
sky. [Page 32]
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|