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1887–1915

Doubts

Rupert Brooke

When she sleeps, her soul, I know, Goes a wanderer on the air, Wings where I may never go, Leaves her lying, still and fair,

Waiting, empty, laid aside, Like a dress upon a chair.... This I know, and yet I know Doubts that will not be denied.

For if the soul be not in place, What has laid trouble in her face? And, sits there nothing ware and wise Behind the curtains of her eyes,

What is it, in the self's eclipse, Shadows, soft and passingly, About the corners of her lips, The smile that is essential she?

And if the spirit be not there, Why is fragrance in the hair?

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Doubts · Rupert Brooke · Poetry Cove