I.
Dost thou love me, my Belovèd?
 Who shall answer yes or no?
What is provèd or disprovèd
 When my soul inquireth so,
Dost thou love me, my Belovèd?
II.
I have seen thy heart to-day,
 Never open to the crowd,
While to love me aye and aye
 Was the vow as it was vowed
By thine eyes of steadfast grey.
III.
Now I sit alone, alone—
 And the hot tears break and burn,
Now, Belovèd, thou art gone,
 Doubt and terror have their turn.
Is it love that I have known?
IV.
I have known some bitter things,—
 Anguish, anger, solitude.
Year by year an evil brings,
 Year by year denies a good;
March winds violate my springs.
V.
I have known how sickness bends,
 I have known how sorrow breaks,—
How quick hopes have sudden ends,
 How the heart thinks till it aches
Of the smile of buried friends.
VI.
Last, I have known thee, my brave
 Noble thinker, lover, doer!
The best knowledge last I have.
 But thou comest as the thrower
Of fresh flowers upon a grave.
VII.
Count what feelings used to move me!
 Can this love a**ort with those?
Thou, who art so far above me,
 Wilt thou stoop so, for repose?
Is it true that thou canst love me?
VIII.
Do not blame me if I doubt thee.
 I can call love by its name
When thine arm is wrapt about me;
 But even love seems not the same,
When I sit alone, without thee.
IX.
In thy clear eyes I descried
 Many a proof of love, to-day;
But to-night, those unbelied
 Speechful eyes being gone away,
There's the proof to seek, beside.
X.
Dost thou love me, my Belovèd?
 Only thou canst answer yes!
And, thou gone, the proof's disprovèd,
 And the cry rings answerless—
Dost thou love me, my Belovèd?