The Poetical Works of George Barlow In Ten [Eleven] Volumes |
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VI. |
VII. |
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IV. |
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VIII. |
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XI. |
The Poetical Works of George Barlow | ||
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XXX.
THE WHOLE
Wouldst thou be with me, if thou knewest the whole?
I cannot tell: my sins are black indeed,—
And yet for every sin I've had to bleed,
Till pale and bloodless is the exhausted soul.
Would still thy woman's pity intercede,
And still thy white hand linger in my own?
Or should I find myself adrift, alone,—
Like one shell in the Atlantic, or one weed?
I cannot tell: my sins are black indeed,—
And yet for every sin I've had to bleed,
Till pale and bloodless is the exhausted soul.
Would still thy woman's pity intercede,
And still thy white hand linger in my own?
Or should I find myself adrift, alone,—
Like one shell in the Atlantic, or one weed?
One thing there is, if sins of mine are large,
Large is the ocean of my suffering too,
And terribly wave-beaten all its marge:
Round youth's proud helm wild darts of anguish flew;
And thou mayest mark besides a broken targe,
Which once a girl's slight arrow struck right through.
Large is the ocean of my suffering too,
And terribly wave-beaten all its marge:
Round youth's proud helm wild darts of anguish flew;
And thou mayest mark besides a broken targe,
Which once a girl's slight arrow struck right through.
The Poetical Works of George Barlow | ||