| WHO do you think stands watching |   | 
|   The snow-tops shining rosy |   | 
| In heaven, now that the darkness |   | 
|   Takes all but the tallest posy? |   | 
|    | 
| Who then sees the two-winged |          5 | 
|   Boat down there, all alone |   | 
| And asleep on the snows last shadow, |   | 
|   Like a moth on a stone? |   | 
|    | 
| The olive-leaves, light as gad-flies, |   | 
|   Have all gone dark, gone black. |   10 | 
| And now in the dark my soul to you |   | 
|   Turns back. |   | 
|    | 
| To you, my little darling, |   | 
|   To you, out of Italy. |   | 
| For what is loveliness, my love, |   15 | 
|   Save you have it with me! |   | 
|    | 
| So, theres an oxen wagon |   | 
|   Comes darkly into sight: |   | 
| A man with a lantern, swinging |   | 
|   A little light. |   20 | 
|    | 
| What does he see, my darling |   | 
|   Here by the darkened lake? |   | 
| Here, in the sloping shadow |   | 
|   The mountains make? |   | 
|    | 
| He says not a word, but passes, |   25 | 
|   Staring at what he sees. |   | 
| What ghost of us both do you think he saw |   | 
|   Under the olive trees? |   | 
|    | 
| All the things that are lovely |   | 
|   The things you never knew |   30 | 
| I wanted to gather them one by one |   | 
|   And bring them to you. |   | 
|    | 
| But never now, my darling |   | 
|   Can I gather the mountain-tips |   | 
| From the twilight like half-shut lilies |   35 | 
|   To hold to your lips. |   | 
|    | 
| And never the two-winged vessel |   | 
|   That sleeps below on the lake |   | 
| Can I catch like a moth between my hands |   | 
|   For you to take. |   40 | 
|    | 
| But hush, I am not regretting: |   | 
|   It is far more perfect now. |   | 
| Ill whisper the ghostly truth to the world |   | 
|   And tell them how |   | 
|    | 
| I know you here in the darkness, |   45 | 
|   How you sit in the throne of my eyes |   | 
| At peace, and look out of the windows |   | 
|   In glad surprise. |   |