BY THE TRUNDLE-BED

TO M. M. R.

LLOST love, be never beyond Love’s calling!For this I claim of you, strong heart, sweetAs fontal water in Arden falling,As first-mown hay in the April heat:To tend from heaven, to rear, to harden,And bring to bloom in the outer cold,Our daffodil bud of a walled-in garden,Our son that is like you, and six years old;And lest his worth be the worth unreal,To ward him not from the mortal blast,But suffer your own, through a long ordeal,Verily like you to be at the last,And hear men murmur, if so he meritIn your old place with your look to arise:“The sign of a saved soul who can inherit?—You have earned, O King! those beautiful eyes.”

LLOST love, be never beyond Love’s calling!For this I claim of you, strong heart, sweetAs fontal water in Arden falling,As first-mown hay in the April heat:To tend from heaven, to rear, to harden,And bring to bloom in the outer cold,Our daffodil bud of a walled-in garden,Our son that is like you, and six years old;And lest his worth be the worth unreal,To ward him not from the mortal blast,But suffer your own, through a long ordeal,Verily like you to be at the last,And hear men murmur, if so he meritIn your old place with your look to arise:“The sign of a saved soul who can inherit?—You have earned, O King! those beautiful eyes.”

LLOST love, be never beyond Love’s calling!For this I claim of you, strong heart, sweetAs fontal water in Arden falling,As first-mown hay in the April heat:

L

LOST love, be never beyond Love’s calling!

For this I claim of you, strong heart, sweet

As fontal water in Arden falling,

As first-mown hay in the April heat:

To tend from heaven, to rear, to harden,And bring to bloom in the outer cold,Our daffodil bud of a walled-in garden,Our son that is like you, and six years old;

To tend from heaven, to rear, to harden,

And bring to bloom in the outer cold,

Our daffodil bud of a walled-in garden,

Our son that is like you, and six years old;

And lest his worth be the worth unreal,To ward him not from the mortal blast,But suffer your own, through a long ordeal,Verily like you to be at the last,

And lest his worth be the worth unreal,

To ward him not from the mortal blast,

But suffer your own, through a long ordeal,

Verily like you to be at the last,

And hear men murmur, if so he meritIn your old place with your look to arise:“The sign of a saved soul who can inherit?—You have earned, O King! those beautiful eyes.”

And hear men murmur, if so he merit

In your old place with your look to arise:

“The sign of a saved soul who can inherit?—

You have earned, O King! those beautiful eyes.”


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