MY Love dwelt in a Northern land. A gray tower in a forest green Was hers, and far on either hand The long wash of the waves was seen, And leagues on leagues of yellow sand, The woven forest boughs between! And through the silver Northern night The sunset slowly died away, And herds of strange deer, lily-white, Stole forth among the branches gray; About the coming of the light, They fled like ghosts before the day! I know not if the forest green Still girdles round that castle gray; I know not if the boughs between The white deer vanish ere the day; Above my Love the grass is green, My heart is colder than the clay! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A PECK OF GOLD by ROBERT FROST IF WE MUST DIE by CLAUDE MCKAY MILK FOR THE CAT by HAROLD MONRO SING-SONG; A NURSERY RHYME BOOK: 92 by CHRISTINA GEORGINA ROSSETTI ABER STATIONS: STATIO QUINTA by THOMAS EDWARD BROWN THE GALLANT WEAVER by ROBERT BURNS PERDITA (ON SEEING MISS ANDERSON IN THE ROLE) by FLORENCE EARLE COATES |