Poems by William Ernest Henley |
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Poems | ||
XXXVII
['Twas in a world of living leaves]
'Twas in a world of living leaves
That we two reaped and bound our sheaves:
They were of white roses and red,
And in the scything they were dead.
That we two reaped and bound our sheaves:
They were of white roses and red,
And in the scything they were dead.
Now the high Autumn flames afield,
And what is all his golden yield
To that we took, and sheaved, and bound
In the green dusk that gladdened round?
And what is all his golden yield
To that we took, and sheaved, and bound
In the green dusk that gladdened round?
180
Yet must the memory grieve and ache
Of that we did for dear love's sake,
But may no more under the sun,
Being, like our summer, spent and done.
Of that we did for dear love's sake,
But may no more under the sun,
Being, like our summer, spent and done.
Poems | ||