Classic and Contemporary Poetry
DEAD LOVE, by MARY MATHEWS ADAMS First Line: Two loves had I. Now both are dead Last Line: And not within a living heart. | ||||||||
Two loves had I. Now both are dead, And both are marked by tombstones white. The one stands in the churchyard near, The other hid from mortal sight. The name on one all men may read, And learn who lies beneath the stone; The other name is written where No eyes can read it but my own. On one I plant a living flower, And cherish it with loving hands; I shun the single withered leaf That tells me where the other stands. To that white tombstone on the hill In summer days I often go; From this white stone that nearer lies I turn me with unuttered woe. O God, I pray, if love must die, And make no more of life a part, Let witness be where all can see, And not within a living heart. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...DOMESDAY BOOK: CHARLES WARREN, THE SHERIFF by EDGAR LEE MASTERS A POEM FOR MAX NORDAU by EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON TWO PROMENADES SENTIMENTALES: 1. RAIN by EDITH SITWELL FRAGMENT THIRTY-SIX by HILDA DOOLITTLE KEENAN'S CHARGE by GEORGE PARSONS LATHROP MISGIVINGS (1860) by HERMAN MELVILLE ODES IV, 7. TO TORQUATUS. DIFFUGERE NIVES by QUINTUS HORATIUS FLACCUS |
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