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At Twilight

The roses of yesteryear
Were all of them white and red:
It fills my heart with silent fear
To find all their beauty fled.

The roses of white are sere,
All faded the roses of red;
And one who loves me is noThere,
And one that I love is dead.

Robyn, A / Joly Robyn

A Robyn
Joly Robyn,
Tell me how thy leman doeth
And thou shall knowe of myn.

My lady is unkynd, perde!
Alack, whi is she so?
She loveth an othre better then me,
And yet she will say no.

RESPONCE

I fynde no suche doublenes,
I fynde women true.
My lady loveth me dowtles
And will chaunge for no newe.

LE PLAINTIF

Modern Love

That strong god whose touch made Dante tremble,
Who made the sun rise and the stars fall,
And could make saints of you and me for an hour,
Now that the world is wise has lost his power:
He was only a pantomime uncle after all.

" Love for another is simply the willing of good"
True for the Middle Ages, a genuine thrill,
But now such childish fancies are outgrown.
This is the truth for modern, adult man:
" Love is simply the perfect wish to kill."

Poem on His Death-bed

A foaming white wave washes over a grave,
the tomb of Rhufawn Pebyr, regal chieftain.
I love today what the English hate, the open land of the North,
and the varied growth that borders the Lliw.
I love those who gave me my fill of mead
where the seas reach in long contention.
I love its household and its strong buildings
and at its lord's wish to go to war.
I love its strand and its mountains,
its castle near the woods and its fine lands,
its water meadows and its valleys,
its white gulls and its lovely women.

O the deep, deep love of Jesus!

O the deep, deep love of Jesus!
Vast, unmeasured, boundless, free;
Rolling as a mighty ocean
In its fullness over me.
Underneath me, all around me,
Is the current of thy love;
Leading onward, leading homeward,
To thy glorious rest above.

O the deep, deep love of Jesus!
Spread his praise from shore to shore;
How he loveth, ever loveth,
Changeth never, never-more;
How he watches o'er his loved ones,
Died to call them all his own;
How for them he intercedeth,
Watcheth o'er them from the throne.

Jesus I am resting, resting

Jesus I am resting, resting In the joy of what thou art;
I am finding out the greatness Of thy loving heart.
Thou hast bid me gaze upon thee, As thy beauty fills my soul,
For by thy transforming power, Thou hast made me whole.

Jesus I am resting, resting In the joy of what thou art;
I am finding out the greatness Of thy loving heart.

O how great thy lovingkindness, Vaster, broader than the sea!
O how marvelous thy goodness Lavished all on me!
Yes, I rest in thee, Beloved, Know what wealth of grace is thine,

And didst thou love the race that loved not thee?

And didst thou love the race that loved not thee?
And didst thou take to heaven a human brow?
Dost plead with man's voice by the marvellous sea?
Art thou his kinsman now?

O God, O kinsman loved, but not enough,
O Man, with eyes majestic after death,
Whose feet have toiled along our pathways rough,
Whose lips drawn human breath:

By that one likeness which is ours and thine,
By that one nature which doth hold us kin,
By that high heaven where, sinless, thou dost shine
To draw us sinners in;

Love and Honour

Love wooing Honour, Honour's love did win
And had his pleasure all a summer's day.
Not understanding how the dooms begin,
Love wooing Honour, wooed her life away.
Then wandered he a full five years' unrest
Until, one night, this Honour that had died
Came as he slept, in youth grown glorified
And smiling like the Saints whom God has blest.

But when he saw her on the clear night shine
Serene with more than mortal light upon her,
The boy that careless was of things divine,
Small Love, turned penitent to worship Honour.