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1849–1903

XXXIV

William Ernest Henley

There was no kiss that day? No intimate Yea-and-Nay, No sweets in hand, no tender, lingering touch? None of those desperate, exquisite caresses,

So instant — O, so brief!— and yet so much, The thought of the swiftest lifts and blesses? Nor any one of those great royal words, Those sovran privacies of speech,

Frank as the call of April birds, That, whispered, live a life of gold Among the heart's still sainted memories, And irk, and thrill, and ravish, and beseech,

Even when the dream of dreams in death's a-cold? No, there was none of these, Dear one, and yet — O, eyes on eyes! O, voices breaking still,

For all the watchful will, Into a kinder kindness than seemed due From you to me, and me to you! And that hot-eyed, close-throated, blind regret

Of woman and man baulked and debarred the blue!— No kiss — no kiss that day? Nay, rather, though we seemed to wear the rue, Sweet friend, how many, and how goodly — say!

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XXXIV · William Ernest Henley · Poetry Cove