SOMETIMES, your head a little downward bent, I see you play at gossip with your thought, Sitting apart, alone, as though you sought To shun the world and live in banishment. Then oft I would approach, in dear intent To greet you -- but my voice, straightway distraught With panic fear, behind my lips is caught, And silence leaves me standing shamed and shent. Mine eyes do fear to meet the beams of thine, My soul doth tremble neath those rays divine, Nor tongue nor voice can to its function move. Only my sighs, only my tear-stained face Must do their office, speaking in their place, And bear sufficing witness of my love. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ON THE MORNING OF CHRIST'S NATIVITY: THE HYMN by JOHN MILTON SONNET: 18. ON THE LATE MASSACRE IN PIEDMONT by JOHN MILTON THE MERMAID by ALFRED TENNYSON ITALIAN MUSIC IN DAKOTA (THE SEVENTEENTH - THE FINEST REGIMENTAL BAND) by WALT WHITMAN MY MOTHER'S GARDEN by ALICE E. ALLEN |