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The Collected Poems of Philip Bourke Marston
Marston, Philip Bourke (1850-1887)
[section]
TO PHILIP BOURKE MARSTON.
TO PHILIP BOURKE MARSTON.
SONG-TIDE.
ALL IN ALL.
WIND-VOICES.
A LAST HARVEST.
LYRICS.
LAST GARDEN SECRETS.
SONNETS.
WHEN WITH THY LIFE THOU DIDST ENCOMPASS MINE.
THE BREADTH AND BEAUTY OF THE SPACIOUS NIGHT.
WHICH IS IT, LOVE?
HER ATMOSPHERE.
LOVE ASLEEP.
LOVE'S GHOST.
APRIL.
MY GRAVE.
HER IN ALL THINGS.
OF EARLY VIOLETS.
BELLS OF LONDON.
A COUNTRY'S GHOST.
TO ALL SAD OF HEART.
TO ALL IN HAVEN.
FORECASTING.
FRIENDSHIP AND LOVE.
HERE IN THIS SUNSET SPLENDOR DESOLATE.
ALL ROUND ABOUT ME IS THE CITY'S NOISE.
O YE WHO SAILED WITH ME.
BELOVED OF HER.
COULD IT BUT BE!
NOT ONLY ROOMS WHEREIN THY LOVE HAS BEEN.
WHAT WAILING WIND.
I THOUGHT THAT I WAS HAPPY YESTERDAY.
WHEN THOU ART FAR FROM ME.
FOUR PARABLES.
[subsection]
AFTERMATH.
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The Collected Poems of Philip Bourke Marston
“Would I were red!” cried a White Rose,
“Would I were white!” cried a red one.
“No longer the light Wind blows,
He went with the dear dead Sun.
Here we forever seem to stay,
And yet a Sun dies every day.”
The Collected Poems of Philip Bourke Marston