Crazy Jane And Jack The Journeyman
William Butler Yeats
I know, although when looks meet I tremble to the bone, The more I leave the door unlatched The sooner love is gone, For love is but a skein unwound Between the dark and dawn. A lonely ghost the ghost is That to God shall come; I - love's skein upon the ground, My body in the tomb - Shall leap into the light lost In my mother's womb. But were I left to lie alone In an empty bed, The skein so bound us ghost to ghost When he turned his head passing on the road that night, Mine must walk when dead.
Next 10 Poems
- William Butler Yeats : Crazy Jane And The Bishop
- William Butler Yeats : Crazy Jane Grown Old Looks At The Dancers
- William Butler Yeats : Crazy Jane On God
- William Butler Yeats : Crazy Jane On The Day Of Judgment
- William Butler Yeats : Crazy Jane On The Mountain
- William Butler Yeats : Crazy Jane Reproved
- William Butler Yeats : Crazy Jane Talks With The Bishop
- William Butler Yeats : Cuchulain Comforted
- William Butler Yeats : Cuchulan's Fight With The Sea
- William Butler Yeats : Death
Previous 10 Poems
- William Butler Yeats : Coole Park, 1929
- William Butler Yeats : Coole Park And Ballylee, 1931
- William Butler Yeats : Consolation
- William Butler Yeats : Come Gather Round Me, Parnellites
- William Butler Yeats : Colonus' Praise
- William Butler Yeats : Colonel Martin
- William Butler Yeats : Church And State
- William Butler Yeats : Chosen
- William Butler Yeats : Byzantium
- William Butler Yeats : Brown Penny