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Poems (Piatt)/Volume 1/After the Quarrel

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4617713Poems — After the QuarrelSarah Piatt
AFTER THE QUARREL.
Hush, my pretty one. Not yet.Wait a little, only wait.Other blue flowers are as wetAs your eyes, outside the gateHe has shut for ever.—ButIs the gate for ever shut?
Just a young man in the rainSaying (the last time?) "good-night!"Should he never come againWould the world be ended quite?Where would all these rosebuds go—All these robins? Do you know?
But—he will not come? Why, then,Is no other within call?There are men, and men, and men—And these men are brothers all!Each sweet fault of his you'll findJust as sweet in all his kind.
None with eyes like his? Oh—oh!In diviner ones did ILook, perhaps, an hour ago.Whose? Indeed (you must not cry)Those I thought of—are not freeTo laugh down your tears, you see.
Voice like his was never heard?No—but better ones, I vow;Did you ever hear a bird?—Listen, one is singing now!And his gloves? His gloves? Ah, well,There are gloves like his to sell.
At the play to-night you'll see,In mock-velvet cloaks, mock earlsWith mock-jewelled swords, that heWere a clown by—Now, those curlsAre the barber's pride, I say;Do not cry for them, I pray.
If no one should love you? Why,You can love some other still:Philip Sidney, Shakespeare, ay,Good King Arthur, if you will;Raphael—he was handsome too.Love them one and all. I do.