DURCAN, Paul
    
      
    
      
    The Difficulty that is Marriage
    
      
    
      
    We disagree to disagree, we divide, we differ;
    
      
    Yet each night as I lie in bed beside you
    
      
    And you are far away curled up in sleep
    
      
    I array the moonlit ceiling with a mosaic of question-marks;
    
      
    How was it I was so lucky to have ever met you?
    
      
    I am no brave pagan proud of my mortality,
    
      
    Yet gladly on this changeling earth I should live for ever
    
      
    If it were with you, my sleeping friend.
    
      
    I have my troubles and I shall always have them
    
      
    But I should rather live with you for ever
    
      
    Than exchange my troubles for a changeless kingdom.
    
      
    But I do not put you on a pedestal or throne;
    
      
    You must have your faults but I do not see them.
    
      
    If it were with you, I should live for ever.