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Dialogue on the Headland

SHE: You’ll not forget these rocks and what I told you?
 
HE: How could I? Never: whatever happens.
 
SHE: What do you think might happen?
    Might you fall out of love? —did you mean that?
 
HE: Never, never! `Whatever’ was a sop
   For jealous listeners in the shadows.
 
SHE: You haven’t answered me. I asked:
    `What do you think might happen?'
 
HE: Whatever happens: though the skies should fall
   Raining their larks and vultures in our laps —
 
SHE: `Though the seas turn to slime’ —say that —
    `Though water—snakes be hatched with six heads.'
 
HE: Though the seas turn to slime, or tower
   In an arching wave above us, three miles high —
 
SHE: `Though she should break with you,' —dare you say that —
    `Though she deny her words on oath.'
 
HE: I had that in my mind to say, or nearly;
   It hurt so much I choked it back.
 
SHE: How many other days can’t you forget?
    How many other loves and landscapes?
 
HE: You are jealous?
 
SHE:        Damnably.
 
HE:      The past is past.
 
SHE: And this?
 
HE:      Whatever happens, this goes on.
 
SHE: Without a future? Sweetheart, tell me now:
    What do you want of me? I must know that.
 
HE: Nothing that isn’t freely mine already.
 
SHE: Say what is freely yours and you shall have it.
 
HE: Nothing that, loving you, I could dare take.
 
SHE: O for an answer with no `nothing’ in it!
 
HE: Then give me everything that’s left.
 
SHE: Left after what?
 
HE:      After whatever happens:
   Skies have already fallen, seas are slime,
   Watersnakes poke and peer six—headedly—
 
SHE: And I lie snugly in the Devil’s arms.
 
HE: I said: `Whatever ahppens.' Are you crying?
 
SHE: You’ll not forget me —ever, ever, ever?

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