Poems (Stuart)/The Tryst
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For works with similar titles, see The Tryst.
THE TRYST.
I raised the veil, I loosed the bands,I took the dead thing from its place.Like a warm stream in frozen landsMy lips went wandering on her face, My hands burnt in her hands.
She could not stay me, being dead;Her body here was mine to hold.What if her lips had lost their red?To me they always tasted cold With the cold words she said.
Did my breath run along her hair,And free the pulse, and fire the brain,My wild blood wake her wild blood there?Her eyelids lifted wide again In a blue, sudden stare.
Beneath my fierce, profane caressThe whole white length of body moved;The drowsy bosom seemed to pressAs if against a breast beloved, Then fail for weariness.
No, not that anguish! Christ forbidThat I should raise such dead! I rose,Stifled the mouth with lilies, hidThose eyes, and drew the long hair close, And shut the coffin lid.
My cold brow on the cold wood laid,Quiet and close to-night we lie.No cruel words her lips have said.I shall not take nor she deny. The dead is with the dead.