Sonnet. Were I To Die, Aldous Huxley Sonnet. Were I To Die Were I to die, you'd break your heart, you say. Well, if it do but bend, I'm satisfied— Bend and rebound—for hearts are temper-tried, Mild steel, not hardened, with the spring and play Of excellent tough swords. It's not that way That you'll be perishing. But when I've died, When snap! my light goes out, what will betide You, if the heart-breaks give you leave to stay? What will be left, I wonder, if you lose All that you gave me? "All? A year or so Out of a life," you say. But worlds, say I, Of kisses timeless given in ecstasy That gave me Real You. I die: you go With me. What's left? Limbs, clothes, a pair of shoes?... The end