But with full daylight finding no relief, Though he had spent the newness of his fears And looked with altered eyes upon his grief, For sorrow often drowses in its tears, And men sleep deepest on a wound, he rose And taking horse made in all haste for Rome, Thinking if thus he might assuage his woes By visiting his dead Natalia's tomb And asking of her dear new-buried lips What secret thought had been of love and him When the world left her in its last eclipse. And still in passionate words he made his theme, That she was waiting yet to hear his cry: "O my soul's soul, I did not bid thee die." | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY: DOW BRITT by EDGAR LEE MASTERS THE WATER MILL by SARAH DOUDNEY THE SEA GYPSY [OR GIPSY] by RICHARD HOVEY THREE HUNDRED THOUSAND MORE by ROBERT MORRIS SONG, WRITTEN AT SEA, IN THE FIRST DUTCH WAR, 1665 ... by CHARLES SACKVILLE (1637-1706) AN ARMOURY by ALCAEUS OF MYTILENE THE UTMOST by EDWARD ROBERT BULWER-LYTTON |