Austin Dobson — To a Greek Girl

WITH breath of thyme and bees that hum, Across the years you seem to come,—    Across the years with nymph-like head,    And wind-blown brows unfilleted; A girlish shape that slips the bud    In lines of unspoiled symmetry; A girlish shape that stirs the blood    With pulse of Spring, Autonoë! Where’er you pass,—where’er you go, I hear the pebbly rillet flow;    Where’er you go,—where’er you pass,    There comes a gladness on the grass; You bring blithe airs where’er you tread,—    Blithe airs that blow from down and sea; You wake in me a Pan not dead,— 15    Not wholly dead!—Autonoë! How sweet with you on some green sod To wreathe the rustic garden-god;    How sweet beneath the chestnut’s shade    With you to weave a basket-braid; To watch across the stricken chords    Your rosy-twinkling fingers flee; To woo you in soft woodland words,    With woodland pipe, Autonoë! In vain,—in vain! The years divide: Where Thamis rolls a murky tide,    I sit and fill my painful reams,    And see you only in my dreams;— A vision, like Alcestis, brought    From under-lands of Memory,— A dream of Form in days of Thought,—    A dream,—a dream, Autonoë!

all Austin Dobson songs all songs from 1877