HOW can I laugh or dance as others do, Or ply my rock or reel? My heart will still return to dreams of you Beside my spinning-wheel. My little dog he cried out in the dark, He would not whisht for me: I took him to my sidewhy did he bark When you were on the sea? I fear the red cockif he crow to-night I keep him close and warm, 'Twere ill with me, if he should wake in fright And you out in the storm. I dare not smile for fear my laugh would ring Across your dying ears; O, if you, drifting, drowned, should hear me sing And think I had not tears! I never thought the sea could wake such waves, Nor that such winds could be; I never wept when other eyes grew blind For some one on the sea. But now I fear and pray all things for you, How many dangers be! I set my wheel aside, what can I do When you are on the sea? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ARIZONA POEMS: 4. THE WINDMILLS by JOHN GOULD FLETCHER THE MAYFLOWERS by JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER THE LOVER: A BALLAD by MARY WORTLEY MONTAGU THE BUILDERS OF THE ARK by MARIA ABDY SONNET: BARBERRIES by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH THE MALLARDS PASS UNHARMED by LAURA FRANCES ALEXANDER THE LOVE SONNETS OF PROTEUS: 103. WRITTEN AT FLORENCE: 1 by WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT |