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The Wayfarers

Rupert Brooke

Is it the hour?  We leave this resting-place
 Made fair by one another for a while.
Now, for a god-speed, one last mad embrace;
 The long road then, unlit by your faint smile.
Ah! the long road! and you so far away!
Oh, I’ll remember! but . . . each crawling day
Will pale a little your scarlet lips, each mile
 Dull the dear pain of your remembered face.

. . . Do you think there’s a far border town, somewhere,
 The desert’s edge, last of the lands we know,
    Some gaunt eventual limit of our light,
 In which I’ll find you waiting; and we’ll go
Together, hand in hand again, out there,
    Into the waste we know not, into the night?
Online text © 1998-2008 Poetry X. All rights reserved.
From Rupert Brooke’s Collected Poems | 1915
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