Page:Poems and ballads (IA balladspoems00swinrich).pdf/100



, what hast thou to do with me? So saith Love, with eyes set against the face of Death; What have I done, O thou strong Death, to thee, That mine own lips should wither from thy breath? Though thou be blind as fire or as the sea, Why should thy waves and storms make war on me? Is it for hate thou hast to find me fair, Or for desire to kiss, if it might be,

My very mouth of song, and kill me there? So with keen rains vexing his crownless hair, With bright feet bruised from no delightful way, Through darkness and the disenchanted air,