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1876–1944

IX

Helen Hay Whitney

How we would live! We'd drink the years like wine, With all to-morrows hid behind the veil, Which is your hair; between two lilies pale — Your slender hands — my heart should lie and shine,

A crimson rose. We'd catch the wind and twine The evening stars — a chaplet musical — To crown our folly, lure the nightingale To sing the bliss your lips should teach to mine.

And if the sage, declaring life is vain, Should frown upon the flower of all our days And chide the sun that knows no tears of rain, He should not tease our heart with cynic eye —

The soul's vast altar stands beyond his gaze When two have lived — then shall they fear to die?

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IX · Helen Hay Whitney · Poetry Cove