William Stanley Braithwaite, ed. (1878–1962). Anthology of Magazine Verse for 1920.
My Lonely One
E
Are the great ways and gracious of your love,
No lesser heart or wearier wing may follow
In those’ broad gyres where you rest and move.
In the clear space between the sky and sea
Wheel her huge orbits, where the sea-winds only
Wander the sun-roads of Immensity.
Your love, how great, how hardly to be borne—
Your tenderness, too perfect for compassion,
Your divine strength, too pure and proud for scorn.
But few to find you, fewer still to keep
Your high path through the solitude of heaven,
My lonely one, your watch upon the Deep.
Veer your great vans—what haven in the west
Now draws you—while the mellowing light makes tender
Your dripping plumes—what islands of the blest?
Beautiful Terror! Let your sacred might
Stoop to me here and save—O let me never
Sink from you now to share a lesser flight!
And my heart flags. In solitude you move
Down the night’s shore: not praying shall avail me
To lift me, fallen from your faultless love.