Man's Devotion

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A lover said, "O Maiden, love me well,
For I must go away:
And should ANOTHER ever come to tell
Of love--What WILL you say?"

And she let fall a royal robe of hair
That folded on his arm
And made a golden pillow for her there;
Her face--as bright a charm

As ever setting held in kingly crown--
Made answer with a look,
And reading it, the lover bended down,
And, trusting, "kissed the book."

He took a fond farewell and went away.
And slow the time went by--
So weary--dreary was it, day by day
To love, and wait, and sigh.

She kissed his pictured face sometimes, and said:
  "O Lips, so cold and dumb,
I would that you would tell me, if not dead,
  Why, why do you not come?"

The picture, smiling, stared her in the face
  Unmoved--e'en with the touch
Of tear-drops--HERS--bejeweling the case--
  'Twas plain--she loved him much.

And, thus she grew to think of him as gay
  And joyous all the while,
And SHE was sorrowing--"Ah, welladay!"
  But pictures ALWAYS smile!

And years--dull years--in dull monotony
  As ever went and came,
Still weaving changes on unceasingly,
  And changing, changed her name.

Was she untrue?--She oftentimes was glad
  And happy as a wife;
But ONE remembrance oftentimes made sad
  Her matrimonial life.--

Though its few years were hardly noted, when
  Again her path was strown
With thorns--the roses swept away again,
  And she again alone!

And then--alas! ah THEN!--her lover came:
  "I come to claim you now--
My Darling, for I know you are the same,
  And I have kept my vow

Through these long, long, long years, and now no more
  Shall we asundered be!"
She staggered back and, sinking to the floor,
  Cried in her agony:

"I have been false!" she moaned, "_I_ am not true--
  I am not worthy now,
Nor ever can I be a wife to YOU--
  For I have broke my vow!"

And as she kneeled there, sobbing at his feet,
  He calmly spoke--no sign
Betrayed his inward agony--"I count you meet
  To be a wife of mine!"

And raised her up forgiven, though untrue;
  As fond he gazed on her,
She sighed,--"SO HAPPY!"  And she never knew
  HE was a WIDOWER.

© James Whitcomb Riley