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AN EMBER PICTURE

James Russell Lowell

How strange are the freaks of memory!

The lessons of life we forget,

While a trifle, a trick of color,

In the wonderful web is set,--

 

Set by some mordant of fancy,

And, spite of the wear and tear

Of time or distance or trouble,

Insists on its right to be there.

 

A chance had brought us together;

Our talk was of matters-of-course;

We were nothing, one to the other,

But a short half-hour's resource.

 

We spoke of French acting and actors,

And their easy, natural way:

Of the weather, for it was raining,

As we drove home from the play.

 

We debated the social nothings

We bore ourselves so to discuss;

The thunderous rumors of battle

Were silent the while for us.

 

Arrived at her door, we left her

With a drippingly hurried adieu,

And our wheels went crunching the gravel

Of the oak-darkened avenue.

 

As we drove away through the shadow,

The candle she held in the door

From rain-varnished tree-trunk to tree-trunk

Flashed fainter, and flashed no more;--

 

Flashed fainter, then wholly faded

Before we had passed the wood;

But the light of the face behind it

Went with me and stayed for good.

 

The vision of scarce a moment,

And hardly marked at the time,

It comes unbidden to haunt me,

Like a scrap of ballad-rhyme.

 

Had she beauty? Well, not what they call so;

You may find a thousand as fair;

And yet there's her face in my memory

With no special claim to be there.

 

As I sit sometimes in the twilight,

And call back to life in the coals

Old faces and hopes and fancies

Long buried, (good rest to their souls!)

 

Her face shines out in the embers;

I see her holding the light,

And hear the crunch of the gravel

And the sweep of the rain that night.

 

'Tis a face that can never grow older,

That never can part with its gleam,

'Tis a gracious possession forever,

For is it not all a dream?