UNTO the land where fight and die The hosts, I saw my love depart; And seems it to my broken heart That none is left on earth but I; And through my lips his parting kiss Drew out my very soul away. What keeps him so long time as this? The sun sinks with another day, And I, all lonely in my tower, Wait his return from hour to hour. The pigeons, cooing soft and low, 'Murmur upon the roof together; Beneath the willows, through the heather, The waters with sad music flow Like Lily, which full showers steep, Its tears my heart no more can hold; E'en hope I can no longer keep. The white moon rises wan and cold, And I, all lonely in my tower, Wait his return from hour to hour. Who mounts the stairs with eager stamp? Can it be he, my love, my bliss? It is not he; it only is My little page, who brings my lamp. Fly, winds of evening; bid him know I think, I dream by day, by night, Of him alone, my joy, my woe! The morn is come with chilling light, And I, all lonely in my tower, Wait his return from hour to hour. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ENVOY, TO 'MORE SONGS FROM VAGABONDIA' by RICHARD HOVEY THE UNSEEN WORLD by CRAVEN LANGSTROTH BETTS SONNETS FOR NEW YORK CITY: 2. A POLITICAL 'BOSS' by ANNA HEMPSTEAD BRANCH THE YOUNG RABBI by E. C. L. BROWNE THE VIGIL OF AIDEN, SELECTION by THOMAS HOLLEY CHIVERS WAR IS KIND: 4 by STEPHEN CRANE THE WRECK ON LOCH MCGARRY by ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE A VERSION OF PART OF THE SEVENTH CHAPTER OF JOB by MARGETTA FAUGERES |