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(Love, canst thou say?) Such end should be to so pure day? Such shining chastity give place To this annulling grave's disgrace? Such hopes be quenched in this despair, Grace chilled to granite everywhere? How should--in vain I cry--how should That be, alas, which _only_ could! LONELINESS How green and strange the light is, Creeping through the window. Lying alone in bed, How strange the night is! How still and chill the air is. It seems no sound could live Here in my room That now so bare is. All bright and still the room is, But easeless here am I. Deep in my heart Cold lonely gloom is! I HEARD A VOICE UPON THE WINDOW BEAT I heard a voice upon the window beat And then grow dim, grow still. Opening I saw the snowy sill Marked with the robin's feet. Chill was the air and chill The thoughts that in my bosom beat. I thought of all that wide and hopeless snow Crusting the frozen lands. Of small birds that in famished bands A-chill and silent grow. And how Earth's myriad hands Clutched only hills of frosted snow. And then I thought of Love that beat and cried Famishing at my breast; How I, by chilling care distrest, Denied him, and Love died.... O, with what sore unrest Love's ghost woke with the bird that cried! FIRST LOVE I "No, no! Leave me not in this dark hour," She cried. And I, "Thou foolish dear, but call not dark this hour; What night doth lour?" And nought did she reply, But in her eye The clamorous trouble spoke, and then was still. O that I heard her once more speak, Or even with troubled eye Teach me her fear, that I might seek Poppies for misery. The hour was dark, although I knew it not, But when the livid dawn broke then I knew, How while I slept the dense night through Treachery's worm her fainting fealty slew. O that I heard her once more speak As then--so weak-- "No, no! Leave me not in this dark hour." That I might answer her, "Love, be at rest, for nothing now shall stir Thy heart, but my heart beating there." II Come back, come back--ah, never more to leave me! Come back, even though your constant longing grieve me, Longing for other looks and hands than mine. By all that's most divine In your frank human beauty, come and cover With that deceiving smile the love your lover Has taught you, and the light that in your eyes Tells of the painful joys that make
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