To A Friend Estranged From Me
Now goes under, and I watch it go under, the
That will not rise again.
Today has seen the setting, in your eyes cold and senseless as the sea,
Of friendship better than bread, and of bright
That lifts a man a little above the beasts that run.
That this could be!
That I should live to
Most vulgar Pride, that stale obstreperous clown,
So fitted out with purple robe and
To stand among his betters!
Face to
With outraged me in this once holy place,
Where Wisdom was a favoured guest and
Truth was harboured out of danger,
He bulks enthroned, a lewd, an insupportable stranger!
I would have sworn, indeed I swore it:
The hills may shift, the waters may decline,
Winter may twist the stem from the twig that bore it,
But never your love from me, your hand from mine.
Now goes under the sun, and I watch it go under.
Farewell, sweet light, great wonder!
You, too, farewell,-but fare not well enough to
You have done wisely to invite the night before the darkness came.
Edna St. Vincent Millay
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The Unexplorer
There was a road ran past our Too lovely to explore I asked my mother once — she That if you followed where it
Mariposa
Butterflies are white and blue In this field we wander through Suffer me to take your hand Death comes in a day or two All the things we ever knew Will be ashes in that hour:
To A Poet That Died Young
Minstrel, what have you to With this man that, after you, Sharing not your happy fate, Sat as England's Laureate
Sonnet VII From Fatal Interview
Night is my sister, and how deep in love, How drowned in love and weedily washed ashore, There to be fretted by the drag and At the tide's edge,