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Home  »  Women Poets of the Nineteenth Century  »  Frances Anne Kemble (1809–1893)

Alfred H. Miles, ed. Women Poets of the Nineteenth Century. 1907.

By Poems. VIII. “Whene’er I Recollect the Happy Time”

Frances Anne Kemble (1809–1893)

WHENE’ER I recollect the happy time,

When you and I held converse dear together,

There come a thousand thoughts of sunny weather,

Of early blossoms, and the fresh year’s prime;

Your memory lives for ever in my mind

With all the fragrant beauties of the spring,

With od’rous lime and silver hawthorn twined,

And many a noonday woodland wandering.

There’s not a thought of you, but brings along

Some sunny dream of river, field, and sky;

’Tis wafted on the blackbird’s sunset song,

Or some wild snatch of ancient melody.

And as I date it still, our love arose

’Twixt the last violet and the earliest rose.