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From a London garden cover

From a London garden

Chapter 39: YOUTH
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About This Book

A collected series of lyrical poems moves between urban and rural imagery to reflect on love, mortality, time, memory, and moral growth. The poet uses concise, imagistic language and varied meters to meditate on human experience: longing and loss, pride and humility, the rhythms of city life and quiet country scenes, the passage of days and seasons, death and consolation. Voices range from personal confession to philosophical observation, with elegiac tones, religious reflection, and celebration of steadfastness. Recurring motifs—light and shadow, dawn and evening, gardens and streets—bind individual pieces into a contemplative portrait of inner life amid modern surroundings.

YOUTH

Youth being gone, but not the dreams of youth,
Life has lost nothing of its earlier fire:
The pale star, newly risen, fades not quite
As the dusk deepens round it into night
But shines with gathering light and mounts the higher.
Age is but youth’s husk if it still enfold
Within it that glad heart of hope and truth
Whose youth, outlasting youth,
Can keep us young when years have made us old.
What though our hopes be stronger than our hands
And we have followed many a dream in vain?
Dearer is that we never gained than all
We garnered; and with Hope’s clear clarion call
Hushed on the height, our youth begins to wane
And we grow old who else had time defied,
And, growing old, endure no longer then,
But leave our lives, as men
Tired with long travel lay their loads aside.
If we had faith in death we should have faith
In life, and age could touch our hearts no more;
The sorrow-haunted world, whose restless moan
Yearns saddening up to heaven like the lone
Long surge of waters on a barren shore,
Would laugh and labour with a heart at rest
And pass unfaltering, knowing, strangely wise,
Though sweet this life that dies,
It is not all—it is not even best.