The Double Fortressby Alfred Noyes
Time, wouldst thou hurt us? Never shall we grow old.Break as thou wilt these bodies of blind clay,Thou canst not touch us here, in our stronghold,Where two, made one, laugh all thy powers away.
Though ramparts crumble and rusty gates grow thin,And our brave fortress dwine to a hollow shell,Thou shalt hear heavenly laughter, far within,Where, young as Love, two hidden lovers dwell.
We shall go clambering up our twisted stairsTo watch the moon through rifts in our grey towers.Thou shalt hear whispers, kisses, and sweet prayersCreeping through all our creviced walls like flowers.
Wouldst wreck us, Time? When thy dull leaguer bringsThe last wall down, look heavenward. We have wings.
Lady In Blue
11 years ago
*sigh* Lovely. Absolutely Lovely.
ReplyDeleteI was trying to think of a certain line to put here, to say wow, I love this one particularly. But I can not chose.
Such beautiful imagery.
I love this part:
ReplyDelete"Look heavenward. We have wings."
Same.
ReplyDeleteThe poem makes me think of a couple growing old together. Still young at heart and in love.