Pretending we'd been married long and long . . . Was it some subtle feeling that she'd striven To conjure Time beyond what Time had given, Or was to give, that suddenly choked my song? -- Or was't that whosoever with keen nerve Too closely stares upon that charmed brink, The gliding shimmer of that green downward curve, Is wooed from all tomorrows, as to sink One with the waters? . . . But I broke the spell Before I plunged . . . said nothing . . . yet 'twas then Came horror, as to the House of Mirth, again -- As when she told me of her prayer in Hell . . . That night we rode into the West-of-men, To this our city of the Fair-and-well. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...TRULY GREAT by WILLIAM HENRY DAVIES THE TEST by RALPH WALDO EMERSON WINTER WITH THE GULF STREAM by GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS ODES: BOOK 2: ODE 13. TO AUTHOR OF MEMOIRS OF HOUSE OF BRANDENBURGH by MARK AKENSIDE SEVEN SAD SONNETS: 5. SHE THINKS OF THE FAITHFUL ONE by MARY REYNOLDS ALDIS |