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The Gift of the Gods

‘GIVE me thy dreams,’ she said, and I
With empty hands and very poor,
Watched my fair flowery visions die
Upon the temple’s marble floor.
 
 
‘Give joy,’ she said. I let joy go;
I saw with cold, unclouded eyes
The crimson of the sunset glow
Across the disenchanted skies.
 
 
‘Give me thy youth,’ she said. I gave,
And, sudden-clouded, died the sun,
And on the green mound of a grave
Fell the slow raindrops, one by one.
 
 
‘Give love,’ she cried. I gave that too.
‘Give beauty.’ Beauty sighed and fled;
For what on earth should beauty do,
When love, who was her life, was dead?
 
 
She took the balm of innocent tears
To hiss upon her altar-coal;
She took the hopes of all my years,
And, at the last, she took my soul.
 
 
With heart made empty of delight,
And hands that held no more fair things
I questioned her—'What shall requite
The savour of my offerings?’
 
 
‘The Gods,’ she said, ‘with generous hand
Give guerdon for thy gifts of cost—
Wisdom is thine—to understand
The worth of all that thou hast lost!’
Other works by Edith Nesbit...



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