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Sonnets on Separation VI.

Topics: classic

To-morrow I shall see you come again             Between the pale trees, through the sullen gate,         Out of the dark and secret house of pain             Where lie the unhappy and unfortunate.         To-morrow you will live with me and love me,             Spring will go on again, I'll see the flowers         And little things, ridiculous things, shall move me             To smiles or tears or verse.    The world is ours         To-morrow.    Open heaths, tall trees, great skies,             With massive clouds that fly and come again,         Sweet fields, delicious rivers and the rise             And fall of swelling land from the swift train         We'll see together, knowing that all this         Is one great room wherein we two may kiss.

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"To-morrow I shall see you come again..."

This evocative piece by Edward Shanks, titled "Sonnets on Separation VI.", represents a masterful exploration of classic. The lines capture a profound emotional resonance... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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