Bliss Carman, et al., eds. The Worlds Best Poetry. Volume VI. Fancy. 1904. | | | | Poems of Sentiment: III. Memory | | Oft in the stilly night | | Thomas Moore (17791852) |
| | | OFT in the stilly night, | |
| Ere slumbers chain has bound me, | |
| Fond Memory brings the light | |
| Of other days around me: | |
| The smiles, the tears, | 5 |
| Of boyhoods years, | |
| The words of love then spoken; | |
| The eyes that shone, | |
| Now dimmed and gone, | |
| The cheerful hearts now broken. | 10 |
| Thus in the stilly night, | |
| Ere slumbers chain has bound me, | |
| Sad Memory brings the light | |
| Of other days around me. | |
| |
| When I remember all | 15 |
| The friends so linked together | |
| I ve seen around me fall, | |
| Like leaves in wintry weather, | |
| I feel like one | |
| Who treads alone | 20 |
| Some banquet-hall deserted, | |
| Whose lights are fled, | |
| Whose garlands dead, | |
| And all but he departed. | |
| Thus in the stilly night, | 25 |
| Ere slumbers chain has bound me, | |
| Sad Memory brings the light | |
| Of other days around me. | | | | |
|
|