If Time and Nature serve us both alike, I shall be dead for years, when you are dying; Remember then how much I loved the birds: That should you hear a gentle bird-voice crying 'Sweet! Sweet!' You'll know at once whose lover waits. I shall be there in all good time to show The way that leads to a new life and home -- Ere Death can freeze one finger-tip or toe. But we'll have years together yet, I trust, In this green world: how many sparrows came To breakfast here this morning, with the frost As plump as snow on window-sill and frame? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE SURRENDER AT APPOMATTOX [APRIL 9, 1865] by HERMAN MELVILLE DARWINISM by AGNES MARY F. ROBINSON ANCESTRESS by MARGUERITE JANVRIN ADAMS PRINCETON by LYMAN WHITNEY ALLEN PEARLS OF THE FAITH: 39. AL-HAFIZ by EDWIN ARNOLD MONA LISA by JOHN KENDRICK BANGS PAULO POST ORDINATIONEM by JOSEPH BEAUMONT THE GIFT by ALICE EWING BLACKWELL ON READING OF THE DEATH OF THOMAS WOLFE by MARION LOUISE BLISS |