Page:The Happy Marriage and Other Poems.pdf/50

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Of cloven feet on hollow ground,—
And after by the friendly stove
Sit peacefully and sup of love.

(3)

No doubt he'd once had eyes to see
Through mill-stones to the mystery
That mill-stones might perhaps intend
If there were Ends beyond the end—
But now he had no plague of eyes.

There was a way of being wise
That was not wisdom: one might love
Too loftily and fall above
As well as one might fall below.

And there were things a man might know
That were not knowledge either.
Truth
For instance.

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