WHO do you think stands watching | |
The snow-tops shining rosy | |
In heaven, now that the darkness | |
Takes all but the tallest posy? | |
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Who then sees the two-winged | 5 |
Boat down there, all alone | |
And asleep on the snows last shadow, | |
Like a moth on a stone? | |
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The olive-leaves, light as gad-flies, | |
Have all gone dark, gone black. | 10 |
And now in the dark my soul to you | |
Turns back. | |
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To you, my little darling, | |
To you, out of Italy. | |
For what is loveliness, my love, | 15 |
Save you have it with me! | |
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So, theres an oxen wagon | |
Comes darkly into sight: | |
A man with a lantern, swinging | |
A little light. | 20 |
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What does he see, my darling | |
Here by the darkened lake? | |
Here, in the sloping shadow | |
The mountains make? | |
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He says not a word, but passes, | 25 |
Staring at what he sees. | |
What ghost of us both do you think he saw | |
Under the olive trees? | |
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All the things that are lovely | |
The things you never knew | 30 |
I wanted to gather them one by one | |
And bring them to you. | |
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But never now, my darling | |
Can I gather the mountain-tips | |
From the twilight like half-shut lilies | 35 |
To hold to your lips. | |
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And never the two-winged vessel | |
That sleeps below on the lake | |
Can I catch like a moth between my hands | |
For you to take. | 40 |
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But hush, I am not regretting: | |
It is far more perfect now. | |
Ill whisper the ghostly truth to the world | |
And tell them how | |
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I know you here in the darkness, | 45 |
How you sit in the throne of my eyes | |
At peace, and look out of the windows | |
In glad surprise. | |