The Poetry Corner

Face In The Tomb That Lies So Still

By Richard Le Gallienne

Face in the tomb, that lies so still, May I draw near, And watch your sleep and love you, Without word or tear. You smile, your eyelids flicker; Shall I tell How the world goes that lost you? Shall I tell? Ah! love, lift not your eyelids; 'Tis the same Old story that we laughed at, - Still the same. We knew it, you and I, We knew it all: Still is the small the great, The great the small; Still the cold lie quenches The flaming truth, And still embattled age Wars against youth. Yet I believe still in the ever-living God That fills your grave with perfume, Writing your name in violets across the sod, Shielding your holy face from hail and snow; And, though the withered stay, the lovely go, No transitory wrong or wrath of things Shatters the faith - that each slow minute brings That meadow nearer to us where your feet Shall flicker near me like white butterflies - That meadow where immortal lovers meet, Gazing for ever in immortal eyes.