POEM

(“I found a few old letters...”)

by Rabindranath Tagore

Rabindranath Tagore                                                       XIV

         I found a few old letters of mine carefully hidden in thy box—a few small toys for thy memory to play with. With a timorous heart thou didst try to steal these trifles from the turbulent stream of time which washes away planets and stars, and didst say, “These are only mine!” Alas, there is no one now who can claim them—who is able to pay their price; yet they are still here. Is there no love in this world to rescue thee from utter loss, even like this love of thine that saved these letters with such fond care?
         O woman, thou camest for a moment to my side and touched me with the great mystery of the woman that there is in the heart of creation—she who ever gives back to God his own outflow of sweetness; who is the eternal love and beauty and youth; who dances in bubbling streams and sings in the morning light; who with heaving waves suckles the thirsty earth and whose mercy melts in rain; in whom the eternal one breaks in two in joy that can contain itself no more and overflows in the pain of love.

This poem originally appeared in the June 1913 issue of Poetry.

THIS ISSUE IS SOLD OUT

 Rabindranath  Tagore

A native of Calcutta, India, who wrote in Bengali and often translated his own work into English, . . . MORE »

More Poems by Rabindranath Tagore

The Gardener 85

(“Tell me if this is all true...”)

(“My soul is alight...”)

Crossing 16

Fruit-gathering LV

MORE »

Related

More Relationship Poems

More Prose Poems

Report a Problem