Bliss Carman, et al., eds. The World’s Best Poetry. 1904.
II. Parting and AbsenceGood-bye
Anonymous“F
From the lips of those who part:
’T is a whispered tone,—’t is a gentle word,
But it springs not from the heart.
It may serve for the lover’s closing lay,
To be sung ’neath a summer sky;
But give to me the lips that say
The honest words, “Good-bye!”
In the guise of courtly speech:
But when we leave the kind and dear,
’T is not what the soul would teach.
Whene’er we grasp the hands of those
We would have forever nigh,
The flame of Friendship bursts and glows
In the warm, frank words, “Good-bye.”
To meet with cares and strife,
Breathes through her tears her doubts and fears
For the loved one’s future life.
No cold “adieu,” no “farewell,” lives
Within her choking sigh,
But the deepest sob of anguish gives,
“God bless thee, boy! Good-bye!”
When the glance hast lost its beam;
When the brow is cold as the marble stone,
And the world a passing dream;
And the latest pressure of the hand,
The look of the closing eye,
Yield what the heart must understand,
A long, a last Good-bye.