“No, no! Leave me not in this dark hour,”
She cried. And I,
“Thou foolish dear, but call not dark this hour;
What night doth lour?”
And nought did she reply,
But in her eye
The clamorous trouble spoke, and then was still.
O that I heard her once more speak,
Or even with troubled eye
Teach me her fear, that I might seek
Poppies for misery.
The hour was dark, although I knew it not,
But when the livid dawn broke then I knew,
How while I slept the dense night through
Treachery's worm her fainting fealty slew.
O that I heard her once more speak
As then — so weak —
“No, no! Leave me not in this dark hour.”
That I might answer her,
“Love, be at rest, for nothing now shall stir
Thy heart, but my heart beating there.”