Page:The Poems and Prose remains of Arthur Hugh Clough, volume 2 (1869).djvu/49

 Undiscerned yet all excluding, Interpose? For the pine-tree boles are dimmer, And the stars bedimmed above; In perspective brief, uncertain, Are the forest-alleys closed, And to whispers indistinctest The resounding torrents lulled. Can it be, and can it be? Upon Earth and here below, In the woodland at my side Thou art with me, thou art here.

'Twas the vapour of the perfume Of the presence that should be, That enwrapt me! That enwraps us, O my Goddess, O my Queen! And I turn At thy feet to fall before thee; And thou wilt not: At thy feet to kneel and reach and kiss thy finger-tips; And thou wilt not: And I feel thine arms that stay me, And I feel O mine own, mine own, mine own, I am thine, and thou art mine!

words they were, and lightly, falsely said; She heard them, and she started,—and she rose, As in the act to speak; the sudden thought And unconsider'd impulse led her on.