And so, is it so? the long sweet pain is over? The dear familiar love must know a change? No more am I, no more, to be your lover, But life be cold once more, and drear, and strange. We have sinned, you say, and sorrow must redeem All the cruel largess of our passionate love, And we, at the last, content us with a dream Who have known a hell below, a heaven above! Well, be it so: thy life I shall not darken: Thy dream, for me, shall be disturbed no more: Thine ears, by day or night, shall never hearken The coming of the steps thou lovedst of yore: And if, afar, a lost wild soul blaspheme, Thou shalt not know it in thy peace supreme. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...NOTES FOR THE FIRST LINE OF A SPANISH POEM by JAMES GALVIN WAITER IN A CALIFORNIA VIETNAMESE RESTURANT by CLARENCE MAJOR PRE-EXISTENCE by PAUL HAMILTON HAYNE THE MERRY SUMMER MONTHS by WILLIAM MOTHERWELL THE RUBAIYAT, 1879 EDITION: 24 by OMAR KHAYYAM THE LOVE OF GOD by ELIZA SCUDDER EPISTLES ON THE CHARACTER AND CONDITION OF WOMEN: 3 by LUCY AIKEN |