I sleep and rest, my heart makes moan Before I am well awake; "Let me bleed! O let me alone, Since I must not break!" For children wake, though fathers sleep With a stone at foot and at head: O sleepless God, forever keep, Keep both living and dead! I lift mine eyes, and what to see And a world happy and fair! I have not wished it to mourn with me -- Comfort is not there. O what anear but golden brooms, But a waste of reedy rills! O what afar but the fine glooms On the rare blue hills! I shall not die, but live forlore -- How bitter it is to part! O to meet thee, my love, once more! O my heart, my heart! No more to hear, no more to see! O that an echo might wake And waft one note of thy psalm to me Ere my heart-strings break! I should know it how faint soe'er, And with angel voices blent; O once to feel thy spirit anear: I could be content! Or once between the gates of gold, While an entering angel trod, But once -- thee sitting to behold On the hills of God! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE DAFT DAYS by ROBERT FERGUSSON SING-SONG; A NURSERY RHYME BOOK: 97 by CHRISTINA GEORGINA ROSSETTI I BLOW YOU A KISS by WILLIAM STANLEY BRAITHWAITE ABSENCE by ROBERT SEYMOUR BRIDGES INTREPID FLOWERING by LOIS CANFIL THE MEDICINE MAN by CHARLES BADGER CLARK JR. |