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				Title:     Guilo 
			    
Author: Ella Wheeler Wilcox [
More Titles by Wilcox]		                
			    
Yes, yes! I love thee, Guilo; thee alone.
       Why dost thou sigh, and wear that face of sorrow?
     The sunshine is to-day's, although it shone
       On yesterday, and may shine on to-morrow.
     I love but thee, my Guilo! be content;
       The greediest heart can claim but present pleasure.
     The future is thy God's. The past is spent.
       To-day is thine; clasp close the precious treasure.
     See how I love thee, Guilo! Lips and eyes
       Could never under thy fond gaze dissemble.
     I could not feign these passion-laden sighs;
       Deceiving thee, my pulses would not tremble.
     "So I loved Romney." Hush, thou foolish one--
       I should forget him wholly wouldst thou let me;
     Or but remember that his day was done
       From that supremest hour when first I met thee.
     "And Paul?" Well, what of Paul? Paul had blue eyes,
       And Romney gray, and thine are darkly tender!
     One finds fresh feelings under change of skies--
       A new horizon brings a newer splendor.
     _As I love thee_ I never loved before;
       Believe me, Guilo, for I speak most truly.
     What though to Romney and to Paul I swore
       The self-same words; my heart now worships newly.
     We never feel the same emotion twice:
       No two ships ever ploughed the self-same billow;
     The waters change with every fall and rise;
       So, Guilo, go contented to thy pillow.
[The end]
Ella Wheeler Wilcox's poem: Guilo
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