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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.
FOUR PARABLES.
[subsection]
LOVE'S DESERTED PALACE.
SPRING AND DESPAIR.
LETHARGY.
FROM LONDON STREETS.
OUT OF SLEEP.
RESIGNATION.
TO-MORROW.
SORROW'S GHOST.
LONDON, FROM FAR.
UNSHELTERED LOVE.
WHEN IN THE DARKNESS I WAKE UP ALONE.
A PRAYER TO SLEEP.
I WALKED IN LOVE'S DESERTED ROOM.
TO THE SPIRIT OF POETRY.
OLD MEMORIES.
GOOD-NIGHT AND GOOD-MORROW.
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