Thomas R. Lounsbury, ed. (1838–1915). Yale Book of American Verse. 1912.
William Wetmore Story 18191895
William Wetmore Story120 Praxiteles and Phryne
A
The twilight faint and pale
Was drawing o’er the sunset glow
Its soft and shadowy veil;
His hand, and turned to one Who stood beside him, half in shade, Said, with a sigh, “’T is done. That waits for me and thee; Thus much—how little!—from the range Of Death and Destiny. Thy rounded limbs decay,— Nor love nor prayers can aught avail To bid thy beauty stay; On marble lips shall live,— For Art can grant what Love denies, And fix the fugitive. The youth of this cold bust; When this quick brain and hand that made, And thou and I art dust! And both our hearts are cold, And love is like a tune that ’s played, And life a tale that ’s told, That love nor life can warm, The same enchanting look shall wear, The same enchanting form. Its beauty age shall spare The bitterness of vanished joy, The wearing waste of care. Shall unborn ages see Perennial youth, perennial grace, And sealed serenity. Shall say, not quite unmoved, ‘So smiled upon Praxiteles The Phryne whom he loved!’”