Songs of the Springtides and Birthday OdeTaken from The Collected Poetical Works of Algernon CharlesSwinburne—Vol. III
How many a night and day

My heart has been as thy heart, and my life

As thy life is, a sleepless hidden thing,

Full of the thirst and hunger of winter and spring,

That seeks its food not in such love or strife

As fill men's hearts with passionate hours and rest.

From no loved lips and on no loving breast

Have I sought ever for such gifts as bring

[Pg 315]

Comfort, to stay the secret soul with sleep.

The joys, the loves, the labours, whence men reap

Rathe fruit of hopes and fears,

I have made not mine; the best of all my days

Have been as those fair fruitless summer strays,

Those water-waifs that but the sea-wind steers,

Flakes of glad foam or flowers on footless ways

That take the wind in season and the sun,

And when the wind wills is their season done.

For all my days as all thy days from birth

My heart as thy heart was in me as thee,


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