Alfred Lord Tennyson

Here you will find the Long Poem Maud: A Monodrama (Part II, excerpt) of poet Alfred Lord Tennyson

Maud: A Monodrama (Part II, excerpt)

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 O that 'twere possible
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 After long grief and pain
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 To find the arms of my true love
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 Round me once again!2.


 When I was wont to meet her
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 In the silent woody places
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 By the home that gave me birth,
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 We stood tranced in long embraces
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 Mixt with kisses sweeter sweeter
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 Than anything on earth.2.


 A shadow flits before me,
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 Not thou, but like to thee:
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 Ah Christ, that it were possible
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 For one short hour to see
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 The souls we loved, that they might tell us
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 What and where they be.2.


 It leads me forth at evening,
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 It lightly winds and steals
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 In a cold white robe before me,
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 When all my spirit reels
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 At the shouts, the leagues of lights,
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 And the roaring of the wheels.2.


 Half the night I waste in sighs,
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 Half in dreams I sorrow after
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 The delight of early skies;
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 In a wakeful doze I sorrow
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 For the hand, the lips, the eyes,
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 For the meeting of the morrow,
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 The delight of happy laughter,
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 The delight of low replies.2.


 'Tis a morning pure and sweet,
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 And a dewy splendour falls
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 On the little flower that clings
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 To the turrets and the walls;
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 'Tis a morning pure and sweet,
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 And the light and shadow fleet;
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 She is walking in the meadow,
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 And the woodland echo rings;
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 In a moment we shall meet;
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 She is singing in the meadow,
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 And the rivulet at her feet
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 Ripples on in light and shadow
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 To the ballad that she sings.2.


 So I hear her sing as of old,
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 My bird with the shining head,
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 My own dove with the tender eye?
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 But there rings on a sudden a passionate cry,
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 There is some one dying or dead,
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 And a sullen thunder is roll'd;
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 For a tumult shakes the city,
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 And I wake, my dream is fled;
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 In the shuddering dawn, behold,
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 Without knowledge, without pity,
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 By the curtains of my bed
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 That abiding phantom cold.2.


 Get thee hence, nor come again,
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 Mix not memory with doubt,
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 Pass, thou deathlike type of pain,
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 Pass and cease to move about!
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 'Tis the blot upon the brain
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 That will show itself without.2.


 Then I rise, the eave-drops fall,
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 And the yellow vapours choke
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 The great city sounding wide;
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 The day comes, a dull red ball
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 Wrapt in drifts of lurid smoke
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 On the misty river-tide.2.


 Thro'the hubbub of the market
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 I steal, a wasted frame;
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 It crosses here, it crosses there,
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 Thro'all that crowd confused and loud,
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 The shadow still the same;
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 And on my heavy eyelids
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 My anguish hangs like shame.2.


 Alas for her that met me,
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 That heard me softly call,
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 Came glimmering thro'the laurels
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 At the quiet evenfall,
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 In the garden by the turrets
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 Of the old manorial hall.2.


 Would the happy spirit descend
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 From the realms of light and song,
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 In the chamber or the street,
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 As she looks among the blest,
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 Should I fear to greet my friend
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 Or to say "Forgive the wrong,"
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 Or to ask her, "Take me, sweet,
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 To the regions of thy rest"?2.


 But the broad light glares and beats,
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 And the shadow flits and fleets
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 And will not let me be;
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 And I loathe the squares and streets,
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 And the faces that one meets,
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 Hearts with no love for me:
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 Always I long to creep
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 Into some still cavern deep,
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 There to weep, and weep, and weep
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 My whole soul out to thee....