Lydia Is Gone This Many A Year
Lizette Woodworth Reese
Lydia is gone this many a year, Yet when the lilacs stir, In the old gardens far or near, The house is full of her. They climb the twisted chamber stair; Her picture haunts the room; On the carved shelf beneath it there, They heap the purple bloom. A ghost so long has Lydia been, Her cloak upon the wall, Broidered, and gilt, and faded green, Seems not her cloak at all. The book, the box on mantel laid, The shells in a pale row, Are those of some dim little maid, A thousand years ago. And yet the house is full of her; She goes and comes again; And longings thrill, and memories stir, Like lilacs in the rain. Out in their yards the neighbors walk, Among the blossoms tall; Of Anne, of Phyllis, do they talk, Of Lydia not at all.
Next 10 Poems
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : Oh, Gray And Tender Is The Rain
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : Reserve
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : Spicewood
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : Tears
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : Telling The Bees
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : That Day You Came
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : The Deserted House
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : Thomas A Kempis
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Previous 10 Poems
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : Lydia
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : Love Came Back At Fall O' Dew
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : Keats
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : In Time Of Grief
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : Immortality
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : Herbs
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : Daffodils
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : Anne
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : After
- Lizette Woodworth Reese : A Song For Candlemas