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OLD SPANISH SONG

Eugene Field

I'm thinking of the wooing

That won my maiden heart

When he--he came pursuing

A love unused to art.

Into the drowsy river

The moon transported flung

Her soul that seemed to quiver

With the songs my lover sung.

And the stars in rapture twinkled

On the slumbrous world below--

You see that, old and wrinkled,

I'm not forgetful--no!

 

He still should be repeating

The vows he uttered then--

Alas! the years, though fleeting,

Are truer yet than men!

The summer moonlight glistens

In the favorite trysting spot

Where the river ever listens

For a song it heareth not.

And I, whose head is sprinkled

With time's benumbing snow,

I languish, old and wrinkled,

But not forgetful--no!

 

What though he elsewhere turneth

To beauty strangely bold?

Still in my bosom burneth

The tender fire of old;

And the words of love he told me

And the songs he sung me then

Come crowding to uphold me,

And I live my youth again!

For when love's feet have tinkled

On the pathway women go,

Though one be old and wrinkled,

She's not forgetful--no!