Edmund Clarence Stedman, ed. (1833–1908). A Victorian Anthology, 1837–1895. 1895.
George Gordon McCraeForby Sutherland
A
Of eve is cool and calm and sweet.
See! straying here a youthful pair,
With sad and slowly moving feet,
O’er which the rosy apples swing;
And there they vow a mingled fate,
One day when George the Third is king.
When, tossing in their ivied tower,
The distant bells made all the air
Melodious with that golden hour.
Sweet day of courtship fond,… the last!
The holy hours of twilight flee
And speed to join the sacred Past.
Is murmuring love-songs to his mate,
As lovely Nell now lifts the latch
Beneath the apples at the gate.
Those gentle eyes with weeping red;
Too soon her swain must breast the foam,
Alas! with that last hour he fled.
Yon heartless coach-guard’s blaring horn;
But naught beside, that spoke or showed
Her sailor to poor Nell forlorn.
A foamy furrow through the seas,
As, plunging gaily, from her bows
She scatters diamonds on the breeze.
In pennoned pomp, with drum and fife,
And all the proud old-world parade
That marks the man-o’-war man’s life.
Dreams while she wears the golden ring;
Her spirit follows lovingly
One humble servant of the king.
To cheer the maid and nerve the youth.
“Forget-me-not!”—how fair it thrives
Where planted in the soil of Truth!
Within a calm, sequestered nook,
Rests at her anchor thankfully
The tall-sterned ship of gallant Cook.
The sea reflects the smiling sky,
Soft breathes the air of perfumed bowers—
How sad to leave it all, and die!
And steeped in beauty;—ah! ’t is hard
When ease and joy succeed to care,
And rest, to “watch” and “mounted guard.”
The end of all his life and cares,
Hangs by a thread; the dying man
Most needs our sympathy and prayers!
Wan in his narrow canvas cot;
Sole tenant of the lone “sick bay,”
Though “mates” came round, he heard them not.
But, ah! the frame was all too weak.
Some phantom strange it seemed he sought,
And vainly tried to rise and speak.
The noonday bugle went; and he
Drained (’t was his last) the cooling cup
A messmate offered helpfully.
Ah, Nell! my number ’s flying. See!—
The horses too;—they ’ve had their corn.
Alas, dear love!… I part from thee!”
“Sweet Nell! Dear maid! My own true Nell!
The coach won’t wait for me!”… and died—
And this was Forby’s strange farewell.
Pulls slowly forth, and leaves the slip
With flags half-mast, and gains the shores,
While silence seals each comrade’s lip.
His treasure in his bosom hid.
What was that treasure? Go and see!
Long since it burst his coffin-lid!
Some hips of roses, with the seeds
Of hedgerow plants, and flowerets gay
(In England such might count for weeds).
In foreign lands; and when folk see
The English roses bloom and grow,
Some one may bless an unknown me.”
A hundred years have passed, and more,
But twining over Forby’s head
Are Nell’s sweet roses on that shore.
With sweet-breathed cowslips, deck the spot,
And nestling ’mid them in the shine,
The meek, blue-eyed “Forget-me-not!”