Sullen Moods

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  Love, do not count your labour lost
  Though I turn sullen, grim, retired
  Even at your side; my thought is crossed
  With fancies by old longings fired.

  And when I answer you, some days
  Vaguely and wildly, do not fear
  That my love walks forbidden ways,
  Breaking the ties that hold it here.

  If I speak gruffly, this mood is
  Mere indignation at my own
  Shortcomings, plagues, uncertainties;
  I forget the gentler tone.

  'You,' now that you have come to be
  My one beginning, prime and end,
  I count at last as wholly 'me,'
  Lover no longer nor yet friend.

  Friendship is flattery, though close hid;
  Must I then flatter my own mind?
  And must (which laws of shame forbid)
  Blind love of you make self-love blind?

  ... Do not repay me my own coin,
  The sharp rebuke, the frown, the groan;
  No, stir my memory to disjoin
  Your emanation from my own.

  Help me to see you as before
  When overwhelmed and dead, almost,
  I stumbled on that secret door
  Which saves the live man from the ghost.

  Be once again the distant light,
  Promise of glory not yet known
  In full perfection — -wasted quite
  When on my imperfection thrown.

© Robert Graves