My enemy came nigh; And I Stared fiercely in his face: My lips went writhing back in a grimace, And stern I watched him from a narrowed eye: Then, as I turned away, My enemy, That bitter-heart, and savage, said to me: -- Some day, when this is past; When all the arrows that we have are cast; We may ask one another why we hate? And fail to find a story to relate: It may seem to us, then, a mystery That we could hate each other -- Thus said he; and did not turn away; Waiting to hear what I might have to say! But I fled quickly: fearing, if I stayed, I might have kissed him, as I would a maid. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE TENTH MUSE: THE PROLOGUE by ANNE BRADSTREET THE BLESSED VIRGIN, COMPARED TO THE AIR WE BREATHE by GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS SOLDIER: TWENTIETH CENTURY by ISAAC ROSENBERG THE GOUTY MERCHANT AND THE STRANGER by HORACE SMITH AN ARMY CORPS ON THE MARCH by WALT WHITMAN ON READING 'VORTICIST POEM ON LOVE' by FRANKLIN PIERCE ADAMS |