I DO not dread an alter'd heart, Or that long line of land or sea Should separate my love from me, I dread that drifting slow apart -- All unresisted, unrestrain'd -- Which comes to some when they have gain'd The dear endeavor of their soul. As two light skiffs that sail'd together, Through days and nights of tranquil weather, Adown some inland stream, might be Drifted asunder, each from each; When, floating with the tide, they reach The hop'd-for end, the promis'd goal, The sudden glory of the sea. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE MEANING OF THE LOOK by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING THE PRIESTHOOD by GEORGE HERBERT IMMORTALITY [OR, VERSE] by WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY: CARL HAMBLIN by EDGAR LEE MASTERS WHEN SHE COMES HOME by JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY |