So once more, Jesus, I behold your feet, feet that long since my pitiful hands laid bare, to wash them,then they seemed a boy's, I thought; how they stood tangled in my covering hair, like a white wild thing in the briers caught. For the first time, this night of love, your sweet and never-cherished limbs are mine to know. I never warmed them with my body's heat, now I may only watch them, thus brought low. But look, your hands, your wasted hands, are torn: Beloved, not by me, with passion's thorn. Your heart is open to the passerby: none should have entered there, save only I. Now you are tired, your mouth, that tired flower, has no desire for my mouth of woe. When, Jesus, Jesus, O when was our hour? Strangely together to our doom we go. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SONG (10) by CHRISTINA GEORGINA ROSSETTI PETER STUYVESANT'S NEW YEAR'S CALL, 1 JAN. 1661 by EDMUND CLARENCE STEDMAN THE SEASONS: A HYMN by JAMES THOMSON (1700-1748) CHINESE PICTURE by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN THIRD YPRES by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN SONG by WILLIAM STANLEY BRAITHWAITE THE SONG OF THE ELEMENTS by MARY ANN BROWNE SIDNEY'S ASTROPHEL AND STELLA: CANTO QUARTO by THOMAS CAMPION |