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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.
PRELUDE.
[subsection]
GARDEN SECRETS.
POEMS.
MISCELLANEOUS SONNETS.
BEREFT.
TO ------.
DESOLATE.
FORSAKEN.
FIRST AND LAST KISS.
NOT LIVED IN VAIN.
CHANGELESS.
ACROSS SEAS.
SPEECHLESS:
TO SLEEP.
A MOOD.
LOVE'S ILLUSIONS.
SLEEPLAND GLORIFIED.
SLEEPLAND FORSAKEN.
JUSTIFICATION.
LOVE'S WARFARE.
LOVE'S TRUCE.
COUNSEL.
IN BONDAGE.
TO A TUNE.
TO A DAY.
STRONGER THAN SLEEP.
SHAMELESS LOVE.
STRICKEN!
ABOVE LOVE.
THE FIRST KISS.
BOUNDED LOVE.
CONJECTURE.
TO M. C., ON HER VISIT TO LONDON IN WINTER.
CAPTURED THOUGHT.
SUPPLANTED LOVES.
ALL IN ALL.
WIND-VOICES.
A LAST HARVEST.
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