The Poetical Works of Robert Browning | ||
I.—JAMES LEE'S WIFE SPEAKS AT THE WINDOW.
I
Ah, Love, but a dayAnd the world has changed!
The sun's away,
And the bird estranged;
The wind has dropped,
And the sky's deranged:
Summer has stopped.
II
Look in my eyes!Wilt thou change too?
Should I fear surprise?
Shall I find aught new
In the old and dear,
In the good and true,
With the changing year?
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III
Thou art a man,But I am thy love.
For the lake, its swan;
For the dell, its dove;
And for thee—(oh, haste!)
Me, to bend above,
Me, to hold embraced.
The Poetical Works of Robert Browning | ||