RAY OF THE DAWN OF TRUTH, Aubrey de Vere, Forgive my play fantastic with thy name, Distilling its true essence by the flame Which Love 'neath Fancy's limbeck lighteth clear. I know not what thy semblance, what thy cheer; If, as thy spirit, hale thy bodily frame, Or furthering by failure each high aim; If green thy leaf, or, like mine, growing sear; But this I think, that thou wilt, by and by Two journeys stoutly, therefore safely trod We laying down the staff, and He the rod So look on me I shall not need to cry "We must be brothers, Aubrey, thou and I: We mean the same thingwill the will of God!" | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...NOTES FOR THE FIRST LINE OF A SPANISH POEM by JAMES GALVIN ASPIRATIONS OF A COUNTRY LAD by GEORGE SANTAYANA SONGS OF TRAVEL: 26. IF THIS WERE FAITH by ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON TRANSFIGURATION by LOUISA MAY ALCOTT DESTINY by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH THE ABIDING LOVE by JOHN WHITE CHADWICK FROM BELVOIR CASTLE by GEORGE CRABBE |