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The Lover Mourns For The Loss Of Love
Pale brows, still hands and dim hair,I had a beautiful friendAnd dreamed that the old despairWould end in love in the end:She looked in my heart one dayAnd saw your image was there;She has gone weeping away.
William Butler Yeats
The Heart Unseen
So many times the heart can break, So many ways,Yet beat along and beat along So many days.A fluttering thing we never see, And only hearWhen some stern doctor to our side Presses his ear.Strange hidden thing, that beats and beats We know not why,And makes us live, though we indeed Would rather die.Mysterious, fighting, loving thing, So sad, so true -I would my laughing eyes some day Might look on you.
Richard Le Gallienne
Desolation.
I think that the bitterest sorrow or pain Of love unrequited, or cold death's woe, Is sweet compared to that hour when we know That some grand passion is on the wane; When we see that the glory and glow and grace Which lent a splendor to night and day Are surely fading, and showing the gray And dull groundwork of the commonplace; When fond expressions on dull ears fall, When the hands clasp calmly without one thrill, When we cannot muster by force of will The old emotions that came at call; When the dream has vanished we fain would keep, When the heart, like a watch, runs out of gear, And all the savor goes out of the year, Oh, then is the time - if we ...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
To A Young Girl
My dear, my dear, I knowMore than anotherWhat makes your heart beat so;Not even your own motherCan know it as I know,Who broke my heart for herWhen the wild thought,That she deniesAnd has forgot,Set all her blood astirAnd glittered in her eyes.
Ebb
I know what my heart is like Since your love died: It is like a hollow ledge Holding a little pool Left there by the tide, A little tepid pool, Drying inward from the edge.
Edna St. Vincent Millay
Betrayed
Dream not of love, to think it like What waking love may prove to be, For I dreamed so and broke my heart, When my false lover slighted me. Love, like to flowers, is sweet when green; The rose in bud aye best appears; And she that loves a handsome man Should have more wit than she has years. I put my finger in a bush, Thinking the sweeter rose to find; I pricked my finger to the bone, And left the sweetest rose behind. I threw a stone into the sea, And deep it sunk into the sand, And so did my poor heart in me When my false lover left the land. I watched the sun an hour too soon Set into clouds behind the town; So my false lover left, and said ...
John Clare
Aedh Laments The Loss Of Love
Dream Anguish
My thought of thee is tortured in my sleep--Sometimes thou art near beside me, but a cloudDoth grudge me thy pale face, and rise to creepSlowly about thee, to lap thee in a shroud;And I, as standing by my dead, to weepDesirous, cannot weep, nor cry aloud.Or we must face the clamouring of a crowdHissing our shame; and I who ought to keepThine honour safe and my betrayed heart proud,Knowing thee true, must watch a chill doubt leapThe tired faith of thee, and thy head bow'd,Nor budge while the gross world holdeth thee cheap!Or there are frost-bound meetings, and reproachAt parting, furtive snatches full of fear;Love grown a pain; we bleed to kiss, and kissBecause we bleed for love; the time doth broachShame, and shame teareth at us till we t...
Maurice Henry Hewlett
Broken-Hearted.
"Cross my hands upon my breast,"Read her last behest."Turn my cheek upon the pillow,As resting from life's stormy billowWith sleep's fine zest!""Cross my hands upon my breast,"Read her last behest,"That the patient bones may lieIn form of thanks eternally,Grimly expressed!"We clasped her hands upon her breast:Oh mockery at misery's hest!We hid in flowers her body's grief, -Counting by many a rose and leafHer days unblessed!
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop
All We Had.
It worn't for her winnin ways,Nor for her bonny faceBut shoo wor th' only lass we had,An that quite alters th' case.We'd two fine lads as yo need see,An' weel we love 'em still;But shoo war th' only lass we had,An' we could spare her ill.We call'd her bi mi mother's name,It saanded sweet to me;We little thowt ha varry sooinAwr pet wod have to dee.Aw used to watch her ivery day,Just like a oppenin bud;An' if aw couldn't see her change,Aw fancied' at aw could.Throo morn to neet her little tongueWor allus on a stir;Awve heeard a deeal o' childer lisp,But nooan at lispt like her.Sho used to play all sooarts o' tricks,'At childer shouldn't play;But then, they wor soa nicely done,
John Hartley
Song.
Oh the tear is in my eye, and my heart it is breaking,Thou hast fled from me, Connor, and left me forsaken;Bright and warm was our morning, but soon has it faded,For I gave thee a true heart, and thou hast betrayed it.Thy footsteps I followed in darkness and danger,From the home of my love to the land of the stranger;Thou wert mine through the tempest, the blight, and the burning;Could I think thou wouldst change when the morn was returning.Yet peace to thy heart, though from mine it must sever,May she love thee as I loved, alone and for ever;I may weep for thy loss, but my faith is unshaken,And the heart thou hast widowed will bless thee in breaking.
Joseph Rodman Drake
Remorse.
Sad is the thought of sunniest days Of love and rapture perished,And shine through memory's tearful haze The eyes once fondliest cherished.Reproachful is the ghost of toys That charmed while life was wasted.But saddest is the thought of joys That never yet were tasted.Sad is the vague and tender dream Of dead love's lingering kisses,To crushed hearts haloed by the gleam Of unreturning blisses;Deep mourns the soul in anguished pride For the pitiless death that won them, -But the saddest wail is for lips that died With the virgin dew upon them.
John Hay
This Heart - A Woman's Dream
At midnight, in the room where he lay deadWhom in his life I had never clearly read,I thought if I could peer into that citadelHis heart, I should at last know full and wellWhat hereto had been known to him alone,Despite our long sit-out of years foreflown,"And if," I said, "I do this for his memory's sake,It would not wound him, even if he could wake."So I bent over him. He seemed to smileWith a calm confidence the whole long whileThat I, withdrawing his heart, held it and, bit by bit,Perused the unguessed things found written on it.It was inscribed like a terrestrial sphereWith quaint vermiculations close and clear -His graving. Had I known, would I have risked the strokeIts reading brought, and my own heart nigh broke!
Thomas Hardy
Rejected.
Gooid bye, lass, aw dunnot blame,Tho' mi loss is hard to bide!For it wod ha' been a shame,Had tha ivver been the brideOf a workin chap like me;One 'ats nowt but love to gie.Hard hoof'd neives like thease o' mine.Surely ne'er wor made to pressHands so lily-white as thine;Nor should arms like thease caressOne so slender, fair, an' pure,'Twor unlikely, lass, aw'm sure.But thease tears aw cannot stay, -Drops o' sorrow fallin fast,Hopes once held aw've put awayAs a dream, an think its past;But mi poor heart loves thi still,An' wol life is mine it will.When aw'm seated, lone and sad,Wi mi scanty, hard won meal,One thowt still shall mak me glad,Thankful that alone aw feelWhat it is to tew an' striv...
Their Sweet Sorrow
They meet to say farewell: Their wayOf saying this is hard to say.He holds her hand an Instant, whollyDistressed - and she unclasps it slowly,He lends his gaze evasivelyOver the printed page that sheRecurs to, with a new-moon shoulderGlimpsed from the lace-mists that infold her.The clock, beneath its crystal cup,Discreetly clicks"Quick! Act! Speak up!"A tension circles both her slenderWrists - and her raised eyes flash in splendor,Even as he feels his dazzled own.Then blindingly, round either thrown,They feel a stress of arms that everStrain tremblingly - and "Never! Never!"Is whispered brokenly, with halfA sob, like a belated laugh,While cloyingly their blurred kiss closes,Sweet as the dew's lip to the...
James Whitcomb Riley
First Loss.
AH! who'll e'er those days restore,Those bright days of early loveWho'll one hour again concede,Of that time so fondly cherish'd!Silently my wounds I feed,And with wailing evermoreSorrow o'er each joy now perish'd.Ah! who'll e'er the days restoreOf that time so fondly cherish'd.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Etheline
The heart that once was rich with light,And happy in your grace,Now lieth cold beneath the scornThat gathers on your face;And every joy it knew before,And every templed dream,Is paler than the dying flashOn yonder mountain stream.The soul, regretting foundered blissAmid the wreck of years,Hath mourned it with intensityToo deep for human tears!The forest fadeth underneathThe blast that rushes byThe dripping leaves are white with death,But Love will never die!We both have seen the starry mossThat clings where Ruin reigns,And one must know his lonely breastAffection still retains;Through all the sweetest hopes of life,That clustered round and round,Are lying now, like withered things,Forsaken on the ...
Henry Kendall
Distance
A hundred miles between usCould never part us moreThan that one step you took from meWhat time my need was sore.A hundred years between usMight hold us less apartThan that one dragging momentWherein I knew your heart.Now what farewell is neededTo all I held most dear,So far and far you are from meI doubt if you could hear.
Theodosia Garrison