Are sorrows hard to bear,-the ruin Of flowers, the rotting of red fruit, A love's decease, a life's undoing, And summer slain, and song-birds mute, And skies of snow and bitter air? These things, you deem, are hard to bear. But ah, the burden, the delight Of dreadful joys! Noon opening wide, Golden and great; the gulfs of night, Fair deaths, and rent veils cast aside, Strong soul to strong soul rendered up, And silence filling like a cup. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...INGRATEFUL [OR UNGRATEFUL] BEAUTY THREATENED by THOMAS CAREW DOWN THE MISSISSIPPI: 7. THE SILENCE by JOHN GOULD FLETCHER ODE ON MELANCHOLY by JOHN KEATS HYMN TO THE NIGHT by HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW DEWEY IN MANILA BAY [MAY 1, 1898] by RICHARD VORHEES RISLEY THE HOUSE OF LIFE: 47. BROKEN MUSIC by DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI |