On Raglan Road on an Autumn Day, I saw her first and knew That her dark hair would weave a snare That I may one day rue.
I saw the danger, yet I walked Along the enchanted way And I said let grief be a falling leaf At the dawning of the day.
On Grafton Street in November, We tripped lightly along the ledge Of a deep ravine where can be seen The worst of passions pledged.
The Queen of Hearts still baking tarts And I not making hay, Well I loved too much; by such and such Is happiness thrown away.
/I gave her the gifts of the mind. I gave her the secret sign That's known to all the artists who have Known true Gods of Sound and Time.
With word and tint I did not stint. I gave her reams of poems to say With her own dark hair and her own name there Like the clouds over fields of May./
On a quiet street where old ghosts meet, I *see* her walking now away from me, So hurriedly. My reason /must allow, For I have wooed, not as I should
A creature made of clay. When the angel woos the clay, he'll lose His wings at the dawn of the day./