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Charlotte Mew

Beside the Bed

Someone has shut the shining eyes, straightened and folded
   The wandering hands quietly covering the unquiet breast:
So, smoothed and silenced you lie, like a child, not again to be questioned or scolded;
   But, for you, not one of us believes that this is rest.

Not so to close the windows down can cloud and deaden
   The blue beyond: or to screen the wavering flame subdue its breath:
Why, if I lay my cheek to your cheek, your grey lips, like dawn, would quiver and redden,
   Breaking into the old, odd smile at this fraud of death.

Because all night you have not turned to us or spoken
   It is time for you to wake; your dreams were never very deep:
I, for one, have seen the thin, bright, twisted threads of them dimmed suddenly and broken,
   This is only a most piteous pretence of sleep!

About the poet

Charlotte MewCharlotte Mew
1869-1928

 
By the same poet
Sea Love
On the Road to the Sea
The Peddler
To a Child in Death
Madeleine in Church
The Farmer’s Bride
The Trees are Down
Ken
In Nunhead Cemetery
The Cenotaph
On the Asylum Road
June, 1915
The Call
I Have Been Through the Gates
 
Related books
Charlotte Mew at amazon.co.uk

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