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            <titlestmt>
                <title>Poems. A New Edition (1881), proof Signature H (Delaware Museum, first
                    author's proof)</title>
                <author>Dante Gabriel Rossetti</author>
                
                
            </titlestmt>
            <editionstmt>
                <edition>1</edition>
                <note>Text courtesy of The Delaware Art Museum</note>
            </editionstmt>
            <extent/>
            
            
            <notesstmt/>
            <sourcedesc>
                <citnstruct>
                    <title>Poems. A New Edition</title>
                    <author>Dante Gabriel Rossetti</author>
                    <imprint>
                        <publisher>F. S. Ellis</publisher>
                        <printer>Strangeways and Walden</printer>
                        <city>London</city>
                        <date compdate="1881-05-12">1881 May 12 (circa)</date>
                        <edition/>
                        <prepub>proof</prepub>
                        <pagination> 97-112</pagination>
                        <issue>1</issue>
                        <authorization>DGR</authorization>
                        <collation>H<hi rend="sup">8</hi>
                        </collation>
                    </imprint>
                    <provenance>
                        <location>Library, Delaware Art Museum</location>
                        <recnum/>
                        <note/>
                    </provenance>
                    <physicaldesc>
                        <binding>
                            <cover/>
                            <endpapers/>
                        </binding>
                        <typography>
                            <typeface>
                                <point>10 point; 6 point leading</point>
                                <font>roman</font>
                            </typeface>
                            <pagelines>
                                <number>22</number>
                                <length/>
                            </pagelines>
                            <margin type="top">2 cm</margin>
                            <margin type="bottom">3.8 cm</margin>
                            <margin type="right">2 cm</margin>
                            <margin type="left">2.5 cm</margin>
                            <note/>
                        </typography>
                        <paper/>
                        <watermark/>
                        <size>19 x 12.8cm (crown octavo)</size>
                        <note/>
                    </physicaldesc>
                </citnstruct>
            </sourcedesc>
        </filedesc>
        <encodingdesc/>
        <profiledesc>
            <commentaries>
                <head>Commentary</head>
                <section type="intro">
                    <head>Introduction</head>
                    <p>This is DGR's corrected copy of the first proof of Signature H. The printer's
                        correction on page 107 was made in error and was refused by DGR. </p>
                </section>
                <section type="texthistcomp">
                    <head>Textual History: Composition</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="texthistrev">
                    <head>Textual History: Revision</head>
                    <p>Four copies of this proof signature are preserved in the library of the
                        Delaware Art Museum. They include this first author's proof, the <xref doc="a.1-1881.sigh2.del.rad">printer's duplicate</xref> of the first
                        proof, and two uncorrected first revises, <xref doc="a.1-1881.sigh3.del.rad">copy 1</xref> and <xref doc="a.1-1881.sigh4.del.rad">another
                        copy</xref>.</p>
                </section>
                <section type="printhist">
                    <head>Printing History</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="recepthist">
                    <head>Reception History</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="historical">
                    <head>Historical</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="literary">
                    <head>Literary</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="translation">
                    <head>Translation</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="autobio">
                    <head>Autobiographical</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="biblio">
                    <head>Bibliographic</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
            </commentaries>
        </profiledesc>
        <revisiondesc/>
    </ramheader>
    <text>
        <body>
            <page n="97" image="a.1-1881.sigh1.del.112-97.tif"/>
            <pageheader>
                <bibliosig>H</bibliosig>
            </pageheader>
            <div0 anchor="0.1" type="lyric" n="1" title="Love's Nocturn." workcode="1-1854">
                <lg n="6" type="septet">
                    <l n="36">But for mine own sleep, it lies</l>
                    <l n="37" indent="1"> In one gracious form's control,</l>
                    <l n="38">Fair with honourable eyes,</l>
                    <l n="39" indent="1"> Lamps of <del>an auspicious</del>
                        <add>a translucent</add> soul:</l>
                    <l n="40" indent="1"> O their glance is loftiest dole,</l>
                    <l n="41" indent="2"> Sweet and wise,</l>
                    <l n="42" indent="1"> Wherein Love descries his goal.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="7" type="septet">
                    <l n="43">Reft of her, my dreams are all</l>
                    <l n="44" indent="1"> Clammy trance that fears the sky: </l>
                    <l n="45">Changing footpaths shift and fall;</l>
                    <l n="46" indent="1"> From polluted coverts nigh,</l>
                    <l n="47" indent="1"> Miserable phantoms sigh;</l>
                    <l n="48" indent="2"> Quakes the pall,</l>
                    <l n="49" indent="1"> And the funeral goes by.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="8" type="septet">
                    <l n="50">Master, is it soothly said</l>
                    <l n="51" indent="1"> That, as echoes of man's speech</l>
                    <l n="52">Far in secret clefts are made,</l>
                    <l n="53" indent="1"> So do all men's bodies reach</l>
                    <l n="54" indent="1"> Shadows o'er thy sunken beach,&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="55" indent="2"> Shape or shade</l>
                    <l n="56" indent="1"> In those halls pourtrayed of each?</l>
                </lg>
                <epage/>
                <page n="98" image="a.1-1881.sigh1.del.98-111.tif"/>
                <lg n="9" type="septet">
                    <l n="57">Ah! might I, by thy good grace</l>
                    <l n="58" indent="1"> Groping in the windy stair,</l>
                    <l n="59">(Darkness and the breath of space</l>
                    <l n="60" indent="1"> Like loud waters everywhere,)</l>
                    <l n="61" indent="1"> Meeting mine own image there</l>
                    <l n="62" indent="2"> Face to face,</l>
                    <l n="63" indent="1"> Send it from that place to her!</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="10" type="septet">
                    <l n="64">Nay, not I; but oh! do thou,</l>
                    <l n="65" indent="1"> Master, from thy shadowkind</l>
                    <l n="66">Call my body's phantom now:</l>
                    <l n="67" indent="1"> Bid it bear its face declin'd</l>
                    <l n="68" indent="1"> Till its flight her slumbers find,</l>
                    <l n="69" indent="2"> And her brow</l>
                    <l n="70" indent="1">Feel its presence bow like wind.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="11" type="septet">
                    <l n="71">Where in groves the gracile Spring</l>
                    <l n="72" indent="1"> Trembles, with mute orison</l>
                    <l n="73">Confidently strengthening,</l>
                    <l n="74" indent="1"> Water's voice and wind's as one</l>
                    <l n="75" indent="1"> Shed an echo in the sun.</l>
                    <l n="76" indent="2"> Soft as Spring,</l>
                    <l n="77" indent="1"> Master, bid it sing and moan.</l>
                </lg>
                <epage/>
                <page n="99" image="a.1-1881.sigh1.del.110-99.tif"/>
                <lg n="12" type="septet">
                    <l n="78">Song shall tell how glad and strong</l>
                    <l n="79" indent="1"> Is the night she soothes alway;</l>
                    <l n="80">Moan shall grieve with that parched tongue</l>
                    <l n="81" indent="1"> Of the brazen hours of day:</l>
                    <l n="82" indent="1"> Sounds as of the springtide they,</l>
                    <l n="83" indent="2"> Moan and song,</l>
                    <l n="84" indent="1"> While the chill months long for May.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="13" type="septet">
                    <l n="85">Not the prayers which with all leave</l>
                    <l n="86" indent="1"> The world's fluent woes prefer,&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="87">Not the praise the world doth give,</l>
                    <l n="88" indent="1"> Dulcet fulsome whisperer;&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="89" indent="1"> Let it yield my love to her,</l>
                    <l n="90" indent="2"> And achieve</l>
                    <l n="91" indent="1"> Strength that shall not grieve or err.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="14" type="septet">
                    <l n="92">Wheresoe'er my dreams befall,</l>
                    <l n="93" indent="1"> Both at night-watch, (let it say,)</l>
                    <l n="94">And where round the sundial</l>
                    <l n="95" indent="1"> The reluctant hours of day,</l>
                    <l n="96" indent="1"> Heartless, hopeless of their way,</l>
                    <l n="97" indent="2"> Rest and call;&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="98" indent="1"> There her glance doth fall and stay.</l>
                </lg>
                <epage/>
                <page n="100" image="a.1-1881.sigh1.del.100-109.tif"/>
                <lg n="15" type="septet">
                    <l n="99">Suddenly her face is there:</l>
                    <l n="100" indent="1"> So do mounting vapours wreathe</l>
                    <l n="101">Subtle-scented transports where</l>
                    <l n="102" indent="1"> The black firwood sets its teeth.</l>
                    <l n="103" indent="1"> Part the boughs and look beneath,&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="104" indent="2"> Lilies share</l>
                    <l n="105" indent="1"> Secret waters there, and breathe.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="16" type="septet">
                    <l n="106">Master, bid my shadow bend</l>
                    <l n="107" indent="1"> Whispering thus till birth of light,</l>
                    <l n="108">Lest new shapes that sleep may send</l>
                    <l n="109" indent="1"> Scatter all its work to flight;&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="110" indent="1"> Master, master of the night,</l>
                    <l n="111" indent="2"> Bid it spend</l>
                    <l n="112" indent="1"> Speech, song, prayer, and end aright.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="17" type="septet">
                    <l n="113">Yet, ah me! if at her head</l>
                    <l n="114" indent="1"> There another phantom lean</l>
                    <l n="115">Murmuring o'er the fragrant bed,&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="116" indent="1"> Ah! and if my spirit's queen</l>
                    <l n="117" indent="1"> Smile those alien prayers between,&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="118" indent="2"> Ah! poor shade!</l>
                    <l n="119" indent="1"> Shall it strive, or fade unseen?</l>
                </lg>
                <epage/>
                <page n="101" image="a.1-1881.sigh1.del.108-101.tif"/>
                <lg n="18" type="septet">
                    <l n="120">How should love's own messenger</l>
                    <l n="121" indent="1"> Strive with love and be love's foe?</l>
                    <l n="122">Master, nay! If thus, in her,</l>
                    <l n="123" indent="1"> Sleep a wedded heart should show,&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="124" indent="1"> Silent let mine image go,</l>
                    <l n="125" indent="2"> Its old share</l>
                    <l n="126" indent="1"> Of thy spell-bound air to know.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="19" type="septet">
                    <l n="127">Like a vapour wan and mute,</l>
                    <l n="128" indent="1"> Like a flame, so let it pass;</l>
                    <l n="129">One low sigh across her lute,</l>
                    <l n="130" indent="1"> One dull breath against her glass;</l>
                    <l n="131" indent="1"> And to my sad soul, alas!</l>
                    <l n="132" indent="2"> One salute</l>
                    <l n="133" indent="1">Cold as when death's foot shall pass.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="20" type="septet">
                    <l n="134">Then, too, let all hopes of mine,</l>
                    <l n="135" indent="1"> All vain hopes by night and day, </l>
                    <l n="136">Slowly at thy summoning sign</l>
                    <l n="137" indent="1"> Rise up pallid and obey.</l>
                    <l n="138" indent="1"> Dreams, if this is thus, were they:&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="139" indent="2"> Be they thine,</l>
                    <l n="140" indent="1"> And to dream<del>land</del>
                        <add>world</add> pine away. </l>
                </lg>
                <epage/>
                <page n="102" image="a.1-1881.sigh1.del.102-107.tif"/>
                <lg n="21" type="septet">
                    <l n="141"> Yet from old time, life, not death,</l>
                    <l n="142" indent="1"> Master, in thy rule is rife:</l>
                    <l n="143"> Lo! through thee, with mingling breath,</l>
                    <l n="144" indent="1"> Adam woke beside his wife.</l>
                    <l n="145" indent="1"> O Love bring me so, for strife,</l>
                    <l n="146" indent="2"> Force and faith,</l>
                    <l n="147" indent="1"> Bring me so not death but life!</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="22" type="septet">
                    <l n="148"> Yea, to Love himself is pour'd</l>
                    <l n="149" indent="1"> This frail song of hope and fear.</l>
                    <l n="150"> Thou art Love, of one accord</l>
                    <l n="151" indent="1"> With kind Sleep to bring her near,</l>
                    <l n="152" indent="1"> Still-eyed, deep-eyed, ah how dear!</l>
                    <l n="153" indent="2"> Master, Lord,</l>
                    <l n="154" indent="1"> In her name implor'd, O hear! </l>
                </lg>
            </div0>
            <epage/>
            <page n="103" image="a.1-1881.sigh1.del.106-103.tif"/>
            <div0 anchor="0.2" type="lyric" n="2" title="The Stream's Secret." workcode="21-1869">
                <divheader>
                    <title>
                        <hi rend="c">THE STREAM'S SECRET</hi>.</title>
                </divheader>
                <lg n="1" type="sexain">
                    <l n="1" indent="2">
                        <hi rend="sc">What</hi> thing unto mine ear</l>
                    <l n="2" indent="1"> Wouldst thou convey,&#8212;what secret thing,</l>
                    <l n="3"> O wandering water ever whispering?</l>
                    <l n="4" indent="1"> Surely thy speech shall be of her.</l>
                    <l n="5"> Thou water, O thou whispering wanderer,</l>
                    <l n="6" indent="2"> What message dost thou bring?</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="2" type="sexain">
                    <l n="7" indent="2"> Say, hath not Love leaned low</l>
                    <l n="8" indent="1"> This hour beside thy far well-head,</l>
                    <l n="9"> And there through jealous hollowed fingers said</l>
                    <l n="10" indent="1"> The thing that most I long to know,&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="11"> Murmuring with curls all dabbled in thy flow</l>
                    <l n="12" indent="2"> And washed lips rosy red?</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="3" type="sexain">
                    <l n="13" indent="2"> He told it to thee there</l>
                    <l n="14" indent="1"> Where thy voice hath a louder tone;</l>
                    <l n="15"> But where it welters to this little moan<epage/>
                        <page n="104" image="a.1-1881.sigh1.del.104-105.tif"/>
                    </l>
                    <l n="16" indent="1"> His will decrees that I should hear.</l>
                    <l n="17"> Now speak: for with the silence is no fear,</l>
                    <l n="18" indent="2"> And I am all alone.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="4" type="sexain">
                    <l n="19" indent="2"> Shall Time not still endow</l>
                    <l n="20" indent="1"> One hour with life, and I and she</l>
                    <l n="21"> Slake in one kiss the thirst of memory?</l>
                    <l n="22" indent="1"> Say, stream; lest Love should disavow</l>
                    <l n="23"> Thy service, and the bird upon the bough</l>
                    <l n="24" indent="2"> Sing first to tell it me.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="5" type="sexain">
                    <l n="25" indent="2"> What whisperest thou? Nay, why</l>
                    <l n="26" indent="1"> Name the dead hours? I mind them well:</l>
                    <l n="27"> Their ghosts in many darkened doorways dwell</l>
                    <l n="28" indent="1"> With desolate eyes to know them by.</l>
                    <l n="29"> The hour that must be born ere it can die,&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="30" indent="2"> Of that I'd have thee tell.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="6" type="sexain">
                    <l n="31" indent="2"> But hear, before thou speak!</l>
                    <l n="32" indent="1"> Withhold, I pray, the vain behest</l>
                    <l n="33"> That while the maze hath still its bower for quest</l>
                    <l n="34" indent="1"> My burning heart should cease to seek.</l>
                    <l n="35"> Be sure that Love ordained for souls more meek</l>
                    <l n="36" indent="2"> His roadside dells of rest.</l>
                </lg>
                <epage/>
                <page n="105" image="a.1-1881.sigh1.del.104-105.tif"/>
                <pageheader>
                    <note>The corrections in this page were made by the printer.</note>
                </pageheader>
                <lg n="7" type="sexain">
                    <l n="37" indent="2"> Stream, when this silver thread</l>
                    <l n="38" indent="1"> In flood-time is a torrent brown</l>
                    <l n="39"> May any bulwark bind thy foaming crown?</l>
                    <l n="40" indent="1"> Shall not the water<add>s</add> surge<del>s</del> and
                        spread</l>
                    <l n="41"> And to the crannied boulders of their bed</l>
                    <l n="42" indent="2"> Still shoot the dead drift down?</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="8" type="sexain">
                    <l n="43" indent="2"> Let no rebuke find place</l>
                    <l n="44" indent="1"> In speech of thine: or it shall prove</l>
                    <l n="45"> That thou dost ill expound the words of Love,</l>
                    <l n="46" indent="1"> Even as thine eddy's rippling race</l>
                    <l n="47"> Would blur the perfect image of his face.</l>
                    <l n="48" indent="2"> I will have none thereof.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="9" type="sexain">
                    <l n="49" indent="2"> O learn and understand</l>
                    <l n="50" indent="1"> That 'gainst the wrongs himself did wreak</l>
                    <l n="51"> Love sought her aid; until her shadowy cheek</l>
                    <l n="52" indent="1"> And eyes beseeching gave command;</l>
                    <l n="53"> And compassed in her close compassionate hand </l>
                    <l n="54" indent="2"> My heart must burn and speak.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="10" type="sexain">
                    <l n="55" indent="2"> For then at last we spoke</l>
                    <l n="56" indent="1"> What eyes so oft had told to eyes</l>
                    <l n="57"> Through that long-lingering silence whose half-sighs<epage/>
                        <page n="106" image="a.1-1881.sigh1.del.106-103.tif"/>
                    </l>
                    <l n="58" indent="1"> Alone the buried secret broke,</l>
                    <l n="59"> Which with snatched hands and lips' reverberate stroke</l>
                    <l n="60" indent="2"> Then from the heart did rise.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="11" type="sexain">
                    <l n="61" indent="2"> But she is far away</l>
                    <l n="62" indent="1"> Now; nor the hours of night grown hoar</l>
                    <l n="63"> Bring yet to me, long gazing from the door,</l>
                    <l n="64" indent="1"> The wind-stirred robe of roseate grey</l>
                    <l n="65"> And rose-crown of the hour that leads the day</l>
                    <l n="66" indent="2"> When we shall meet once more.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="12" type="sexain">
                    <l n="67" indent="2"> Dark as thy blinded wave</l>
                    <l n="68" indent="1"> When brimming midnight floods the glen,&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="69"> Bright as the laughter of thy runnels when</l>
                    <l n="70" indent="1"> The dawn yields all the light they crave;</l>
                    <l n="71"> Even so these hours to wound and that to save </l>
                    <l n="72" indent="2"> Are sisters in Love's ken.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="13" type="sexain">
                    <l n="73" indent="2"> Oh sweet her bending grace</l>
                    <l n="74" indent="1"> Then when I kneel beside her feet;</l>
                    <l n="75"> And sweet her eyes' o'erhanging heaven; and sweet</l>
                    <l n="76" indent="1"> The gathering folds of her embrace;</l>
                    <l n="77"> And her fall'n hair at last shed round my face </l>
                    <l n="78" indent="2"> When breaths and tears shall meet.</l>
                </lg>
                <epage/>
                <page n="107" image="a.1-1881.sigh1.del.102-107.tif"/>
                <msadds type="other">
                    <trans>range</trans>
                    <desc>Printer's correction of indentation of line 93.</desc>
                </msadds>
                <lg n="14" type="sexain">
                    <l n="79" indent="2"> Beneath her sheltering hair,</l>
                    <l n="80" indent="1"> In the warm silence near her breast,</l>
                    <l n="81"> Our kisses and our sobs shall sink to rest;</l>
                    <l n="82" indent="1"> As in some still trance made aware</l>
                    <l n="83"> That day and night have wrought to fulness there</l>
                    <l n="84" indent="2"> And Love has built our nest.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="15" type="sexain">
                    <l n="85" indent="2"> And as in the dim grove,</l>
                    <l n="86" indent="1"> When the rains cease that hushed them long,</l>
                    <l n="87"> 'Mid glistening boughs the song-birds wake to song,&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="88" indent="1"> So from our hearts deep-shrined in love,</l>
                    <l n="89"> While the leaves throb beneath, around, above,</l>
                    <l n="90" indent="2"> The quivering notes shall throng.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="16" type="sexain">
                    <l n="91" indent="2"> Till tenderest words found vain</l>
                    <l n="92" indent="1"> Draw back to wonder mute and deep,</l>
                    <l n="93"> And closed lips in closed arms a silence keep,</l>
                    <l n="94" indent="1"> Subdued by memory's circling strain,&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="95"> The wind-rapt sound that the wind brings again </l>
                    <l n="96" indent="2"> While all the willows weep.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="17" type="sexain">
                    <l n="97" indent="2"> Then by her summoning art</l>
                    <l n="98" indent="1"> Shall memory conjure back the sere</l>
                    <l n="99"> Autumnal Springs, from many a dying year<epage/>
                        <page n="108" image="a.1-1881.sigh1.del.108-101.tif"/>
                    </l>
                    <l n="100" indent="1"> Born dead; and, bitter to the heart,</l>
                    <l n="101"> The very ways where now we walk apart </l>
                    <l n="102" indent="2"> Who then shall cling so near.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="18" type="sexain">
                    <l n="103" indent="2"> And with each thought new-grown,</l>
                    <l n="104" indent="1"> Some sweet caress or some sweet name</l>
                    <l n="105"> Low-breathed shall let me know her thought the same;</l>
                    <l n="106" indent="1"> Making me rich with every tone</l>
                    <l n="107"> And touch of the dear heaven so long unknown </l>
                    <l n="108" indent="2"> That filled my dreams with flame.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="19" type="sexain">
                    <l n="109" indent="2"> Pity and love shall burn</l>
                    <l n="110" indent="1"> In her pressed cheek and cherishing hands;</l>
                    <l n="111"> And from the living spirit of love that stands</l>
                    <l n="112" indent="1"> Between her lips to soothe and yearn,</l>
                    <l n="113"> Each separate breath shall clasp me round in turn</l>
                    <l n="114" indent="2"> And loose my spirit's bands.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="20" type="sexain">
                    <l n="115" indent="2"> Oh passing sweet and dear,</l>
                    <l n="116" indent="1"> Then when the worshipped form and face</l>
                    <l n="117"> Are felt at length in darkling close embrace;</l>
                    <l n="118" indent="1"> Round which so oft the sun shone clear,</l>
                    <l n="119"> With mocking light and pitiless atmosphere,</l>
                    <l n="120" indent="2"> In many an hour and place. </l>
                </lg>
                <epage/>
                <page n="109" image="a.1-1881.sigh1.del.100-109.tif"/>
            <pageheader>
               <note>The word &#8220;mouth&#8221; in line
                    125 has been dropped to the next line.</note>
            </pageheader>
                <lg n="21" type="sexain">
                    <l n="121" indent="2"> Ah me! with what proud growth</l>
                    <l n="122" indent="1"> Shall that hour's thirsting race be run;</l>
                    <l n="123"> While, for each several sweetness still begun</l>
                    <l n="124" indent="1"> Afresh, endures love's endless drouth:</l>
                    <l n="125" part="i"> Sweet hands, sweet hair, sweet cheeks, sweet eyes, sweet</l>
                    <l n="125" indent="4" part="f">[mouth.</l>
                    <l n="126" indent="2"> Each singly wooed and won. 
                    </l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="22" type="sexain">
                    <l n="127" indent="2"> Yet most with the sweet soul</l>
                    <l n="128" indent="1"> Shall love's espousals then be knit;</l>
                    <l n="129"> For very passion of peace shall breathe from it</l>
                    <l n="130" indent="1"> O'er tremulous wings that touch the goal,</l>
                    <l n="131"> As on the unmeasured height of Love's control</l>
                    <l n="132" indent="2"> The lustral fires are lit.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="23" type="sexain">
                    <l n="133" indent="2"> Therefore, when breast and cheek</l>
                    <l n="134" indent="1"> Now part, from long embraces free,&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="135"> Each on the other gazing shall but see</l>
                    <l n="136" indent="1"> A self that has no need to speak:</l>
                    <l n="137"> All things unsought, yet nothing more to seek,&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="138" indent="2"> One love in unity.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="24" type="sexain">
                    <l n="139" indent="2"> O water wandering past,&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="140" indent="1"> Albeit to thee I speak this thing,</l>
                    <l n="141"> O water, thou that wanderest whispering,<epage/>
                        <page n="110" image="a.1-1881.sigh1.del.110-99.tif"/>
                    </l>
                    <l n="142" indent="1"> Thou keep'st thy counsel to the last.</l>
                    <l n="143"> What spell upon thy bosom should Love cast,</l>
                    <l n="144" indent="2"> His message thence to wring?</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="25" type="sexain">
                    <l n="145" indent="2"> Nay, must thou hear the tale</l>
                    <l n="146" indent="1"> Of the past days,&#8212;the heavy debt</l>
                    <l n="147"> Of life that obdurate time withholds,&#8212;ere yet</l>
                    <l n="148" indent="1"> To win thine ear these prayers prevail,</l>
                    <l n="149"> And by thy voice Love's self with high All-hail</l>
                    <l n="150" indent="2"> Yield up the love-secret?</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="26" type="sexain">
                    <l n="151" indent="2"> How should all this be told?&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="152" indent="1"> All the sad sum of wayworn days;&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="153"> Heart's anguish in the impenetrable maze;</l>
                    <l n="154" indent="1"> And on the waste uncoloured wold</l>
                    <l n="155"> The visible burthen of the sun grown cold </l>
                    <l n="156" indent="2"> And the moon's labouring gaze?</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="27" type="sexain">
                    <l n="157" indent="2"> Alas! shall hope be nurs'd</l>
                    <l n="158" indent="1"> On life's all-succouring breast in vain,</l>
                    <l n="159"> And made so perfect only to be slain?</l>
                    <l n="160" indent="1"> Or shall not rather the sweet thirst</l>
                    <l n="161"> Even yet rejoice the heart with warmth dispers'd</l>
                    <l n="162" indent="2"> And strength grown fair again?</l>
                </lg>
                <epage/>
                <page n="111" image="a.1-1881.sigh1.del.98-111.tif"/>
                <lg n="28" type="sexain">
                    <l n="163" indent="2"> Stands it not by the door&#8212;</l>
                    <l n="164" indent="1"> Love's Hour&#8212;till she and I shall meet;</l>
                    <l n="165"> With bodiless form and unapparent feet</l>
                    <l n="166" indent="1"> That cast no shadow yet before,</l>
                    <l n="167"> Though round its head the dawn begins to pour </l>
                    <l n="168" indent="2"> The breath that makes day sweet?</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="29" type="sexain">
                    <l n="169" indent="2"> Its eyes invisible</l>
                    <l n="170" indent="1"> Watch till the dial's thin-thrown shade</l>
                    <l n="171"> Be born,&#8212;yea, till the journeying line be laid</l>
                    <l n="172" indent="1"> Upon the point that wakes the spell,</l>
                    <l n="173"> And there in lovelier light than tongue can tell</l>
                    <l n="174" indent="2"> Its presence stand array'd.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="30" type="sexain">
                    <l n="175" indent="2"> Its soul remembers yet</l>
                    <l n="176" indent="1"> Those sunless hours that passed it by;</l>
                    <l n="177"> And still it hears the night's disconsolate cry,</l>
                    <l n="178" indent="1"> And feels the branches wringing wet</l>
                    <l n="179"> Cast on its brow, that may not once forget, </l>
                    <l n="180" indent="2"> Dumb tears from the blind sky.</l>
                </lg>               
                <lg n="31" type="sexain">
                    <l n="181" indent="2"> But oh! when now her foot</l>
                    <l n="182" indent="1"> Draws near, for whose sake night and day</l>
                    <l n="183"> Were long in weary longing sighed away,&#8212;<epage/>
                        <page n="112" image="a.1-1881.sigh1.del.112-97.tif"/>
                    </l>
                    <l n="184" indent="1"> The Hour of Love, 'mid airs grown mute,</l>
                    <l n="185"> Shall sing beside the door, and Love's own lute</l>
                    <l n="186" indent="2"> Thrill to the passionate lay. </l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="32" type="sexain">
                    <l n="187" indent="2"> Thou know'st, for Love has told</l>
                    <l n="188" indent="1"> Within thine ear, O stream, how soon</l>
                    <l n="189"> That song shall lift its sweet appointed tune.</l>
                    <l n="190" indent="1"> O tell me, for my lips are cold,</l>
                    <l n="191"> And in my veins the blood is waxing old </l>
                    <l n="192" indent="2"> Even while I beg the boon.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="33" type="sexain">
                    <l n="193" indent="2"> So, in that hour of sighs</l>
                    <l n="194" indent="1"> Assuaged, shall we beside this stone</l>
                    <l n="195"> Yield thanks for grace; while in thy mirror shown</l>
                    <l n="196" indent="1"> The twofold image softly lies,</l>
                    <l n="197"> Until we kiss, and each in other's eyes </l>
                    <l n="198" indent="2"> Is imaged all alone.</l>
                </lg>
                <lg n="34" type="sexain">
                    <l n="199" indent="2"> Still silent? Can no art</l>
                    <l n="200" indent="1"> Of Love's then move thy pity? Nay,</l>
                    <l n="201"> To thee let nothing come that owns his sway:</l>
                    <l n="202" indent="1"> Let happy lovers have no part</l>
                    <l n="203"> With thee; nor even so sad and poor a heart </l>
                    <l n="204" indent="2"> As thou hast spurned to-day. </l>
                </lg>
            </div0>
            <epage/>
        </body>
    </text>
</ram>