Your heart has trembled to my tongue, Your hands in mine have lain, Your thought to me has leaned and clung, Again and yet again, My dear, Again and yet again. Now die the dream, or come the wife, The past is not in vain, For wholly as it was your life, Can never be again, My dear, Can never be again. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...TO OUR MOCKING-BIRD; DIED OF A CAT, MAY, 1878 by SIDNEY LANIER THE CANDLE INDOORS by GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS A VISION OF CONNAUGHT IN THE THIRTEENTH CENTURY by JAMES CLARENCE MANGAN THE BLUEBIRD by WILLIAM P. ALEXANDER FOR THE QUEEN MOTHER by JOHN BETJEMAN THE PROLOGUE by RICHARD EUGENE BURTON THE LORDS' MASQUE: FIRST DANCE by THOMAS CAMPION TOWARDS DEMOCRACY: PART 3. NOT FOR A FEW MONTHS OR YEARS by EDWARD CARPENTER |