Bliss Carman, et al., eds. The World’s Best Poetry. 1904.
VIII. Wedded LoveIn Twos
William Channing Gannett (18401923)S
Garden-gates that no one sees
Save they come in happy twos,—
Not in one, nor yet in threes.
Leads a pathway straight and true;
Map and survey know it not,—
He who finds, finds room for two!
Never skies so blue as theirs,
Never flowers so many-sweet,
As for those who come in pairs.
Now a cradle bars the way,
Now a little mound, behind,—
So the two go through the day.
But has heard a song or sigh,
Lo! another garden-gate
Opens as the two go by.
“Five and twenty!” fills the air
With a silvery echo low,
All about the startled pair.
Closer, heart to heart, they lean;
Stiller, softer, falls the light;
Few the twos, and far between.
Down the paths so well they know,
Once again at hidden gates
Stand the two: they enter slow.
May our two your latchet press!
Garden of the Sunset Land,
Hold their dearest happiness!
Then a wicket in the wall:
Then one, stepping on alone,—
Then two at the Heart of All!