A Jongleur Strayed - Verses on Love and Other Matters Sacred and Profane by Richard Le Gallienne
page 59 of 117 (50%)
page 59 of 117 (50%)
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Or I old letters may con o'er,
And dream on faces seen no more, The buried treasure of the years, Too visionary now for tears; Open old cupboards and explore Sometimes, for an old sweetheart's sake, A delicate romantic ache, Sometimes a swifter pang of pain To read old tenderness again, As though the ink were scarce yet dry, And She still She and I still I. What if I were to write as though Her letter came an hour ago! An hour ago!--This post-mark says . . . But out upon these rainy days! Come tie the packet up again, The sun is back--enough of rain. IN THE CITY Away from the silent hills and the talking of upland waters, The high still stars and the lonely moon in her quarters, I fly to the city, the streets, the faces, the towers; And I leave behind me the hush and the dews and the flowers, |
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