Here our roads part. Go thou by thy green valley,
 Thy youth before thee and the river Nile.
 My path lies o'er the desert, and my galley
 Has rougher seas to plough (and days) the while.
 I know not what to offer you: a smile,
 A blessing, a farewell? I dare not dally
 Even with the thought of tears. 'Twas but a mile
 We walked together, and such things were folly.
 I will not hope, who have no faith in fate,
 That I shall you remember or you me
 Beyond to--morrow. Yet, perhaps the wind
 Blowing some morning through its Eastern gate
 May tell you of my fortune; and behind
 The Western star some evening I may see,
 As in a vision of far days more kind,
 Your dear eyes watching while the night grows blind.
At The Parting Of The Ways
written byWilfrid Scawen Blunt
© Wilfrid Scawen Blunt





