The Loss Of Love
All through an empty place I go,
And find her not in any room;
The candles and the lamps I
Go down before a wind of gloom.
Thick-spraddled lies the dust about,
A fit, sad place to write her
Or draw her face the way she
That legendary night she came.
The old house crumbles bit by bit;
Each day I hear the ominous
That says another rent is
For winds to pierce and storms to flood.
My orchards groan and sag with fruit;
Where,
Indian-wise, the bees go round;
I let it rot upon the bough;
I eat what falls upon the ground.
The heavy cows go
In agony with clotted teats;
My hands are slack; my blood is cold;
I marvel that my heart still beats.
I have no will to weep or sing,
No least desire to pray or curse;
The loss of love is a terrible thing;
They lie who say that death is worse.
Countee Cullen
Other author posts
She Of The Dancing Feet Sings
And what would I do in heaven pray, Me with my dancing feet And limbs like apple boughs that When the gusty rain winds beat
Karenge Ya Marenge
Wherein are words sublime or noble What Invests one speech with haloed eminence, Makes it the sesame for all doors shut, Yet in its like sees but impertinence
Yet Do I Marvel
I doubt not God is good, well-meaning, And did He stoop to quibble could tell The little buried mole continues blind, Why flesh that mirrors Him must some day die,
For my Grandmother
This lovely flower fell to seed; Work gently sun and rain; She held it as her dying That she would grow again