CHANGE.

AND this is what is left of youth! . . .

There were two boys, who were bred up together,

Shared the same bed, and fed at the same board;

Each tried the other's sport, from their first change,

Young hunters of the butterfly and bee,

To when they followed the fleet haire, and tried

The swiftness of the bird. They lay beside

The silver trout-stream, watching as the sun

Played on the bubbles; shared each in the store

Of either's garden; and together read

Of him, the master of the desert isle,

Till a low hut, a gun, and a canoe,

Bounded their wishes. Or if ever came

A thought of future days, 'twas but to say

That they would share each other's lot, and do

Wonders, no doubt. But this was vain: they parted

With promises of long remembrance, words

Whose kindness was the heart's, and those warm tears,

Hidden like shame by the young eyes which shed them,

But which are thought upon in after-years

As what we woudl give worlds to shed once more.

They met again,--but different from themselves,

At least what each remembered of themselves:

The one proud as a soldier of his rank,

And of his many battles; and the other

Proud of his Indian wealth, and of the skill

And toil which gathered it; each with a brow

And heart alike darkened by years and care.

They met with cold words, and yet colder looks:

Each was changed in himself, and yet each thought

The other only changed, himself the same.

The coldness bred disklike, and rivalry

Came like the pestilence o'er some sweet thoughts

That lingered yet, healthy and beautiful,

Amid dark and unkindly ones. And they,

Whose boyhood had not known one jarring word,

Were strangers in their age: if their eyes met,

'Twas but to look contempt; and when they spoke,

Their speech was wormwood! . . . .

. . . . And this, this is life!