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1876–1944

VIII

Helen Hay Whitney

As one who looks too long upon the sun When he must turn to earth from flame-shot skies Sees all else dark through his bereaved eyes, And yet may watch the rainbow ribbons run

Athwart the gravity of gray and dun, He holds the darkness dearer for the prize Wherein his only pledge of radiance lies When he the vast magnificence must shun.

So we who play with rainbows, having seen The sun's own face. We may not hold the west, Which burns against the bosom of the night, But in the after-glow, with eyes serene,

We still may find, dear heart, the sun's bequest, An echoed glory of our passionate light.

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VIII · Helen Hay Whitney · Poetry Cove