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1849–1903

XLV

William Ernest Henley

O, these long nights of days! All the year's baseness in the ways, All the year's wretchedness in the skies; While on the blind, disheartened sea

A tramp-wind plies Cringingly and dejectedly! And rain and darkness, mist and mud, They cling, they close, they sneak into the blood,

They crawl and crowd upon the brain: Till in a dull, dense monotone of pain The past is found a kind of maze, At whose every coign and crook,

Broad angle and privy nook, There waits a hooded Memory, Sad, yet with strange, bright, unreproaching eyes.

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XLV · William Ernest Henley · Poetry Cove