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Poor Wounded Heart
Poor wounded heart, farewell! Thy hour of rest is come; Thou soon wilt reach thy home, Poor wounded heart, farewell!The pain thou'lt feel in breaking Less bitter far will be,Than that long, deadly aching, This life has been to thee. There--broken heart, farewell! The pang is o'er-- The parting pang is o'er; Thou now wilt bleed no more. Poor broken heart, farewell!No rest for thee but dying-- Like waves whose strife is past,On death's cold shore thus lying, Thou sleepst in peace at last-- Poor broken heart, farewell!
Thomas Moore
An End
Love, strong as Death, is dead.Come, let us make his bedAmong the dying flowers:A green turf at his head;And a stone at his feet,Whereon we may sitIn the quiet evening hours.He was born in the Spring,And died before the harvesting:On the last warm summer dayHe left us; he would not stayFor Autumn twilight cold and grey.Sit we by his grave, and singHe is gone away.To few chords and sad and lowSing we so:Be our eyes fixed on the grassShadow-veiled as the years passWhile we think of all that wasIn the long ago.
Christina Georgina Rossetti
The Broken Heart.
Oh think not with love's soft token,Or music my heart to thrillFor its strings its strings are broken,And the chords would fain be still!Oh think not to waken the measureOf joy on a ruined luteThink not to waken pleasure,Where grief sits mourning and mute.The pearls that gleam in the billow,But darken the gloom of the deepAnd laughter plants the pillowWith thorns, where sorrow would sleep.The gems that gleam on the fingerOf her who is sleeping and cold,But wring the hearts that linger.And dream of the love they told.My bosom is but a grave,My breast a voiceless choirSpeak not to the echoless cave,Touch not the broken lyre!
Samuel Griswold Goodrich
Maternal Grief
Departed Child! I could forget thee onceThough at my bosom nursed; this woeful gainThy dissolution brings, that in my soulIs present and perpetually abidesA shadow, never, never to be displacedBy the returning substance, seen or touched,Seen by mine eyes, or clasped in my embrace.Absence and death how differ they! and howShall I admit that nothing can restoreWhat one short sigh so easily removed?Death, life, and sleep, reality and thought,Assist me, God, their boundaries to know,O teach me calm submission to thy Will!The Child she mourned had overstepped the paleOf Infancy, but still did breathe the airThat sanctifies its confines, and partookReflected beams of that celestial lightTo all the Little-ones on sinful earthNot unvouchsaf...
William Wordsworth
Lost Love.
Shoo wor a bonny, bonny lass,Her e'en as black as sloas;Her hair a flyin thunner claad,Her cheeks a blowin rooas.Her smile coom like a sunny gleamHer cherry lips to curl;Her voice wor like a murm'ring stream'At flowed throo banks o' pearl.Aw long'd to claim her for mi own,But nah mi love is crost;An aw mun wander on alooan,An mourn for her aw've lost.Aw could'nt ax her to be mine,Wi' poverty at th' door:Aw nivver thowt breet e'en could shineWi' love for one so poor;*/ 92 */But nah ther's summat i' mi breast,Tells me aw miss'd mi way:An lost that lass I loved the bestThroo fear shoo'd say me nay.Aw long'd to claim her for, &c.Aw saunter'd raand her cot at morn,An oft i'th' dar...
John Hartley
He Cries Out Against Love
There are three fine devils eating my heart--They left me, my grief! without a thing;Sickness wrought, and Love wrought,And an empty pocket, my ruin and my woe.Poverty left me without a shirt,Barefooted, barelegged, without any covering;Sickness left me with my head weakAnd my body miserable, an ugly thing.Love left me like a coal upon the floor,Like a half-burned sod that is never put out.Worse than the cough, worse than the fever itself,Worse than any curse at all under the sun,Worse than the great povertyIs the devil that is called "Love" by the people.And if I were in my young youth againI would not take, or give, or ask for a kiss!
Isabella Augusta, Lady Gregory
Broken Dreams
There is grey in your hair.Young men no longer suddenly catch their breathWhen you are passing;But maybe some old gaffer mutters a blessingBecause it was your prayerRecovered him upon the bed of death.For your sole sakethat all hearts ache have known,And given to others all hearts ache,From meagre girlhoods putting onBurdensome beautyfor your sole sakeHeaven has put away the stroke of her doom,So great her portion in that peace you makeBy merely walking in a room.Your beauty can but leave among usVague memories, nothing but memories.A young man when the old men are done talkingWill say to an old man, Tell me of that ladyThe poet stubborn with his passion sang usWhen age might well have chilled his blood.Vagu...
William Butler Yeats
The Tear.
O lachrymarum fons, tenero sacrosDucentium ortus ex animo; quater Felix! in imo qui scatentem Pectore te, pia Nympha, sensit. [1]Gray, 'Alcaic Fragment'.1.When Friendship or LoveOur sympathies move;When Truth, in a glance, should appear,The lips may beguile,With a dimple or smile,But the test of affection's a Tear.2.Too oft is a smileBut the hypocrite's wile,To mask detestation, or fear;Give me the soft sigh,Whilst the soul-telling eyeIs dimm'd, for a time, with a Tear.3.Mild Charity's glow,To us mortals below,Shows the soul from barbarity clear;Compassion will melt,Where this virtue is felt,And its dew is...
George Gordon Byron
A Broken Rainbow On The Skies Of May
A Broken rainbow on the skies of May,Touching the dripping roses and low clouds,And in wet clouds its scattered glories lost:So in the sorrow of her soul the ghostOf one great love, of iridescent ray,Spanning the roses dim of memory,Against the tumult of life's rushing crowdsA broken rainbow on the skies of May.A flashing humming-bird among the flowers,Deep-coloured blooms; its slender tongue and billSucking the syrups and the calyxed myrrhs,Till, being full of sweets, away it whirrs:Such was his love that won her heart's rich bowersTo give to him their all, their honied showers,The bloom from which he drank his body's fillA flashing humming-bird among the flowers.A moon, moth-white, that through long mists of fleeceMoves amber-girt into ...
Madison Julius Cawein
Divided
We came to the dividing line, Then he passed over and I am here,Sad and sore is this heart of mine That has no power to shed a tear,For, like one who rises and walks in sleep,I am lost in a dream--I cannot weep.Yet he was good and fair to see I know in my heart he loved me well,What separated him from me, I cannot tell, oh! I cannot tell,For the blow came sudden, and sharp, and sore,And I am alone now for evermore.I thought to walk through all our time Together, linked to a lofty aim;With sudden wrench I'm left behind-- My heart is slain! oh, my heart is slain!And the ghost of my heart within me cries,Why, alas! was I made a sacrifice?My royal eagle ordained to soar-- Breast to the storm,...
Nora Pembroke
The Vision
Long had she knelt at the Madonna's shrine,With the empty chapel, cold and grey,Telling her beads, while grief with marring lineAnd bitter tear stole all her youth away.Outcast was she from what Life holdeth dear;Banished from joy that other souls might win;And from the dark beyond she turned with fear,Being so branded by the mark of sin.Yet when at last she raised her troubled face,Haunted by sorrow, whitened by alarms,Mary leaned down from out the pictured place,And laid the little Christ within her arms.Rosy and warm she held Him to her heart,She - the abandoned one - the thing apart.
Virna Sheard
Poor Broken Flower.
Poor broken flower! what art can now recover thee? Torn from the stem that fed thy rosy breath-- In vain the sunbeams seek To warm that faded cheek;The dews of heaven, that once like balm fell over thee; Now are but tears, to weep thy early death.So droops the maid whose lover hath forsaken her,-- Thrown from his arms, as lone and lost as thou; In vain the smiles of all Like sunbeams round her fall:The only smile that could from death awaken her, That smile, alas! is gone to others now.
Edgar
I have not wept for Edgar, as a mother Weeps for the tender lamb she lays to rest;And yet it cannot be that any other Baby like him shall lie upon my breast;For he was with us but a passing guest,A birdling that belonged not to the nest.Looking upon his large dark eyes so tender, Filled with the solemn light of Paradise,I knew that word would soon come to surrender, My babe, not mine, but native to the skies;As the sweet lark that ever upward flies,He would be taken from my longing eyes.For from the first he looked to be earth-weary, And clung to me with no desire to play;He never laughed and crowed with spirit cheery Like my earth babies; but from day to daySeemed ever yearning for the far-away,And well I kn...
Bereavement.
1.How stern are the woes of the desolate mourner,As he bends in still grief o'er the hallowed bier,As enanguished he turns from the laugh of the scorner,And drops, to Perfection's remembrance, a tear;When floods of despair down his pale cheek are streaming,When no blissful hope on his bosom is beaming,Or, if lulled for awhile, soon he starts from his dreaming,And finds torn the soft ties to affection so dear.2.Ah! when shall day dawn on the night of the grave,Or summer succeed to the winter of death?Rest awhile, hapless victim, and Heaven will saveThe spirit, that faded away with the breath.Eternity points in its amaranth bower,Where no clouds of fate o'er the sweet prospect lower,Unspeakable pleasure, of goodness the dower,When woe...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Beyond
Love's aftermath! I think the time is nowThat we must gather in, alone, apartThe saddest crop of all the crops that grow,Love's aftermath.Ah, sweet,--sweet yesterday, the tears that startCan not put back the dial; this is, I trow,Our harvesting! Thy kisses chill my heart,Our lips are cold; averted eyes avowThe twilight of poor love: we can but part,Dumbly and sadly, reaping as we sow,Love's aftermath.
Ernest Christopher Dowson
In Memory Of John Leach Craig
In the midst of Life we are in Death.What is it that has stilled the usual hurry, Checking the eager tread of rapid feet?Why does the business face look sad and sorry Within the place where merchants choose to meet?A something not unusual or strange,One face is missing on the Corn Exchange.Alas! they say he had uncommon merit, High the esteem and confidence he won;He brought to business life a joyous spirit, And mixed commercial tact with boyish fun.We miss his breezy laugh, his pleasant face,The skill that marked him for the foremost place.There is a ship steaming across the billow, That should have brought him to his mother's knee;Did warning dreams hover around her pillow, Of the dear face she never ...
Silent Tears
What bitter sorrow courses downYon mourners faded cheek?Those scalding drops betray a griefWithin, too full to speak.Outspoken words cannot expressThe pangs, the pains of years;Theyre neer so deep or eloquentAs are those silent tears.Here is a wound that in the breastMust canker, hidn from sight;Though all without seems sunny day,Within Tis ever night.Yet sometimes from this secret sourceThe gloomy truth appears;The winds dark dungeon must have ventIf but in silent tears.The world may deem from outward looksThat heart is hard and cold;But oh! could they the mantle liftWhat sorrows would be told!Then, only then, the truth would showWhich most the bosom sears:The pain portrayed by burning word...
Henry Kendall
The Bereaved One
She sleeps and I see through a shadowy haze,Where the hopes of the past and the dreams that I cherishedIn the sunlight of brighter and happier days,As the mists of the morning, have faded and perished.She sleeps and will waken to bless me no more;Her life has died out like the gleam on the river,And the bliss that illumined my bosom of yoreHas fled from its dwelling for ever and ever.I had thought in this life not to travel alone,I had hoped for a mate in my joys and my sorrowBut the face of my idol is colder than stone,And my path will be lonely without her to-morrow.I was hoping to bask in the light of her smileWhen Fortune and Fame with their laurels had crownd meBut the fire in her eyes has been dying the while,And the thorns of affliction...