Helen Hunt Jackson

Refrain

Of all the songs which poets sing
     The ones which are most sweet
  Are those which at close intervals
     A low refrain repeat;
  Some tender word, some syllable,
     Over and over, ever and ever,
  While the song lasts,
     Altering never,
Music if sung, music if said,
Subtle like some golden thread
     A shuttle casts,
  In and out on a fabric red,
     Till it glows all through
     With the golden hue.
  Oh! of all the songs sung,
     No songs are so sweet
  As the songs with refrains,
     Which repeat and repeat.
 
  Of all the lives lived,
     No life is so sweet,
  As the life where one thought,
     In refrain doth repeat,
  Over and over, ever and ever,
     Till the life ends,
     Altering never,
Joy which is felt, but is not said,
Subtler than any golden thread
     Which the shuttle sends
  In and out in a fabric red,
     Till it glows all through
     With a golden hue.
  Oh! of all the lives lived,
     Can be no life so sweet,
  As the life where one thought
     In refrain doth repeat,
 
  “Now name for me a thought
     To make life so sweet,
  A thought of such joy
     Its refrain to repeat.”
  Oh! foolish to ask me. Ever, ever
     Who loveth believes,
     But telleth never.
It might be a name, just a name not said,
But in every thought; like a golden thread
     Which the shuttle weaves
  In and out on a fabric red,
     Till it glows all through
     With a golden hue.
  Oh! of all sweet lives,
     Who can tell how sweet
  Is the life which one name
     In refrain doth repeat?
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