Alfred H. Miles, ed. Women Poets of the Nineteenth Century. 1907.
By Lyrics. I. Love Came Knocking at My DoorEmily Pfeiffer (18411890)
L
’Twas the morning of the year, and the morning of the day;
He was a winsome boy,
And I a maiden coy,
But I followed him, I followed! for he drew me with the wile
Of his eyes, his words, and whispers, and the glamour of his smile.
When I followed as he led me through his gardens and his bowers!
Love was a thing divine,
I was his, and he was mine;
So I followed him, I followed, could have followed till I died,
In the wake of his young glory, and the fulness of my pride.
Love has grown to his full stature; I am weary as I go.
Shamed is the golden head,
And the magic smile is fled
For the dust and soil of earth
Mock the greatness of Love’s birth;
But I follow, and if weeping I, though weeping, follow still,
With no magic and no glamour, but a faithful human will.
Though the lingering dreams of morning with the morn have passed away.
Now Love is no more glad,
Nay, his very smile is sad;
But he needs me even more
Than I needed him before;
So I follow, still I follow, and through all the darker seeming,
Love’s true need of me is sweeter than his smile that held me dreaming.
And the gate shall open wide that we enter side by side,
We may gaze in glad surprise
Into one another’s eyes,
Not to find a winsome boy,
Or a maiden vain and coy;
But two creatures shining bright
In the pure and keen love-light,
Of the patience and the faith
That have conquered more than death.
Then I follow love no longer, but I sink upon thy breast
To abide there hushed for ever in the joy of utter rest.