C.D. Warner, et al., comp. The Library of the World’s Best Literature.
An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.
Separation
By Sully Prudhomme (René François Armand Prudhomme) (18391907)
W
A narrow path—heart close to heart;
At noon, upon the world’s highway,
I walk to right, you left—apart.
How bright is yours! How black is mine!
Your choice is still the sunniest weather,
I keep the side where naught will shine.
The very sand has diamond beads;
No beams e’er light with gladdening ray
The cold gray soil my footstep treads.
Caressing, woo your eye and ear;
Your hair the breeze, adoring, greets;
Your lip the bee, entranced, draws near.
My heart’s deep wound is ill at ease;
From leaf-hid nests the fondling cry
Disturbs me more than it can please.
May make too keen our mortal joy;
The air’s embrace has too much might;
The incense e’en of flowers may cloy.
That closes round at closing day,
With half-shut eye, on some true breast
To watch Life’s fever ebb away.
By that highway at evening-fall?
I’ll wait you there. We two shall meet
Where one deep shadow wraps it all.