ONLY two patient eyes to stare Out of the canvas. All the rest -- The warm green gown, the small hands pressed Light in the lap, the braided hair That must have made the sweet low brow So earnest, centuries ago, When some one saw it change and glow -- All faded! Just the eyes burn now. I dare say people pass and pass Before the blistered little frame, And dingy work without a name Stuck in behind its square of glass. But I, well, I left Raphael Just to come drink these eyes of hers, To think away the stains and blurs And make all new again and well. Only, for tears my head will bow, Because there on my heart's last wall, Scarce one tint left to tell it all, A picture keeps its eyes, somehow. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE GARDEN OF ADONIS by EMMA LAZARUS ON LAYING THE CORNER-STONE OF THE BUNKER HILL MOMUMENT by JOHN PIERPONT THE POET'S SONG FOR HIS WIFE by BRYAN WALLER PROCTER PANEGYRIC by ABU BAKR MUHUMMAD PEARLS OF THE FAITH: 60. AL-MU'HID by EDWIN ARNOLD SONG by CHARLES GRANGER BLANDEN SICK BED by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN THE PERMANENT BRAND by BERTON BRALEY TO ROBERT BURNS; AN EPISTLE ON INSTINCT by ROBERT SEYMOUR BRIDGES |