Public Domain Poetry And Stories - My Old Sweetheart by Joseph Horatio Chant
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My Old Sweetheart

    By Joseph Horatio Chant



    My old sweetheart is away to-day;
    I feel as I did of old,
    In my courting days, when far away
    I yearned for her more than gold.

    I thought of her handsome, smiling face,
    Her noble and cultured brow,
    Of her gentle ways, and charming grace;
    I missed her less then than now.

    Through the long years of our wedded life,
    Now nearly a full two score,
    She has proved herself a loving wife,
    And a sweetheart evermore.

    Our love has grown with the flight of time,
    As the mountain stream may grow;
    Or as a tree in a genial clime
    When free from the frost and snow.

    The tempest may madly rage without,
    We have lasting peace within;
    And confidence ne'er gives place to doubt,
    Nor concord to noisy din.

    She will soon return again to me,
    From her visit in the West,
    And the dear face that I long to see
    Will be nestling on my breast.

    And I will feel as in olden time,
    With a love not dreamed of then;
    No happier man in any clime
    Is known to the sons of men.

    And when we part at the silent tomb,
    'Twill be but a passing day
    Before we meet where there is no gloom,
    And sweethearts forever stay.


    Full forty-six years of wedded life,
    Enjoyed with my sweetheart here;
    They were happy years, devoid of strife,
    And full of Christian cheer;
    Then her Master called her spirit home,
    And I am left to walk alone.

    Ere long my journey, too, will end,
    And my spirit to God arise;
    Perhaps he may my sweetheart send
    To escort me to the skies;
    And there with our Saviour we shall be,
    Yet sweethearts still through eternity.



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