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False Love And True Logic
THE DISCONSOLATEMy heart will break, I'm sure it will: My lover, yes, my favorite, heWho seemed my own through good and ill, Has basely turned his back on me. THE COMFORTERAh! silly sorrower, weep no more; Your lover's turned his back, we see;But you had turned his head before, And now he's as he ought to be.
Samuel Laman Blanchard
Rutha.
The days are long and lonely, The weary eve comes on,And the nights are filled with dreaming Of one beloved and gone.I reach out in the darkness And clasp but empty air,For Rutha dear has vanished - I wonder, wonder where.Yet must it be: her nature So lovely, pure, and true;So nearly like the angels, Is she an angel too.The cottage is dismantled Of all that made it bright;Beyond its silent portal No love, nor life, nor light.Where are the hopes I cherished, The joys that once I knew,The dreams, the aspirations? All, all are perished too.Yes, love's dear chain is broken; From shore to shore I roam -No comfort, no companion, No happiness, n...
Hattie Howard
The Death Of Love
So Love is dead, the Love we knew of old!And in the sorrow of our hearts' hushed hallsA lute lies broken and a flower falls;Love's house stands empty and his hearth lies cold.Lone in dim places, where sweet vows were told,In walks grown desolate, by ruined wallsBeauty decays; and on their pedestalsDreams crumble and th' immortal gods are mold.Music is slain or sleeps; one voice alone,One voice awakes, and like a wandering ghostHaunts all the echoing chambers of the PastThe voice of Memory, that stills to stoneThe soul that hears; the mind, that, utterly lost,Before its beautiful presence stands aghast.
Madison Julius Cawein
Gone.
The heavens look down with chilly frown,The sun blinks oot wi' watery e'e,The drift flies fast upon the blast,The naked trees moan shiveringly.The sun is gone, by mists withdrawn,Muffling his head in snow-clouds grey,The earth turns white, against the night,The laden winds drive furiously.The flowers are slain that graced the plain,The earth is locked wi' bitter frost;And my heart cries to stormy skiesAfter the dreary loved and lost.The spring will come, the flowers will bloom,The leaves in beauty clothe the tree,But never more, oh, never more,Will my lost darling come to me.Beyond the skies her happy eyesLook fearlessly in eyes Divine;The bitter smart, the hungry heart,Waiting with empty arms, is mine.
Nora Pembroke
Cross-Currents
They parted a pallid, trembling I pair,And rushing down the laneHe left her lonely near me there;I asked her of their pain."It is for ever," at length she said,"His friends have schemed it so,That the long-purposed day to wedNever shall we two know.""In such a cruel case," said I,"Love will contrive a course?"" Well, no . . . A thing may underlie,Which robs that of its force;"A thing I could not tell him of,Though all the year I have tried;This: never could I have given him love,Even had I been his bride."So, when his kinsfolk stop the wayPoint-blank, there could not beA happening in the world to-dayMore opportune for me!"Yet hear no doubt to your surprise -I am sorry, for his sake,
Thomas Hardy
On Fanny Godwin.
Her voice did quiver as we parted,Yet knew I not that heart was brokenFrom which it came, and I departedHeeding not the words then spoken.Misery - O Misery,This world is all too wide for thee.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
George And Sarah Green
Who weeps for strangers? Many weptFor George and Sarah Green;Wept for that pair's unhappy fate,Whose grave may here be seen.By night, upon these stormy fells,Did wife and husband roam;Six little ones at home had left,And could not find that home.For 'any' dwelling-place of manAs vainly did they seek.He perish'd; and a voice was heardThe widow's lonely shriek.Not many steps, and she was leftA body without lifeA few short steps were the chain that boundThe husband to the wife.Now do those sternly-featured hillsLook gently on this grave;And quiet now are the depths of air,As a sea without a wave.But deeper lies the heart of peaceIn quiet more profound;The heart of quietness is here<...
William Wordsworth
Ireland, Ireland
Down thy valleys, Ireland, Ireland, Down thy valleys green and sad,Still thy spirit wanders wailing, Wanders wailing, wanders mad.Long ago that anguish took thee, Ireland, Ireland, green and fair,Spoilers strong in darkness took thee, Broke thy heart and left thee there.Down thy valleys, Ireland, Ireland, Still thy spirit wanders mad;All too late they love that wronged thee, Ireland, Ireland, green and sad.
Henry John Newbolt
Lagrimas.
God send me tears!Loose the fierce band that binds my tired brain,Give me the melting heart of other years, And let me weep again! Before me passThe shapes of things inexorably true.Gone is the sparkle of transforming dew From every blade of grass. In life's high noonAimless I stand, my promised task undone,And raise my hot eyes to the angry sun That will go down too soon. Turned into gallAre the sweet joys of childhood's sunny reign;And memory is a torture, love a chain That binds my life in thrall. And childhood's painCould to me now the purest rapture yield;I pray for tears as in his parching field The husbandman for rain.
John Hay
Those Days have Gone.
Those days have gone, those happy days,When we two loved to roam,Beside the rivulet that strays,Near by my rustic home.Yes, they have fled, and in the past,We've left them far behind,Yet dear I hold, those days of old,When you were true and kind.You dreamed not then of wealth or fame,The world was bright and fair,I seldom knew a grief or game,That you, too, did not share.And though I mourn my hapless fate,In mem'ry's store I find,And dearly hold those days of old,When you were true and kind.Say, can the wealth you now possess,Such happiness procure,As did our youthful pleasures bless,When both our hearts were pure?No, - and though wandering apart,I strive to be resigned;And dearer hold those days ...
John Hartley
One Foot On Sea, And One On Shore.
"Oh tell me once and tell me twiceAnd tell me thrice to make it plain,When we who part this weary day,When we who part shall meet again.""When windflowers blossom on the seaAnd fishes skim along the plain,Then we who part this weary day,Then you and I shall meet again.""Yet tell me once before we part,Why need we part who part in pain?If flowers must blossom on the sea,Why, we shall never meet again."My cheeks are paler than a rose,My tears are salter than the main,My heart is like a lump of iceIf we must never meet again.""Oh weep or laugh, but let me be,And live or die, for all's in vain;For life's in vain since we must part,And parting must not meet again"Till windflowers blossom on the s...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Tears, Tears.
Tears, tears,With wifely fearsImmixed - I held my breath,My boy!As down the streetThe drums did beatThat led you to your death,My boy!Oh! Oh!Where'er I go,And soldier boys I see,My jo!I wis', I wis',For him whose kissWas blessedness to me,My jo!Still, still,By wish and will,The land you saved, I love,My boy!Beneath a stone,It holds your bone,I'll clasp your soul above,My boy!
A. H. Laidlaw
The Heart On The Sleeve
I wore my heart upon my sleeve,Tis most unwise, they say, to do -But then how could I but believeThe foolish thing was safe with you?Yet, had I known, 'twas safer farWith wolves and tigers, the wild seaWere kinder to it than you are -Sweetheart, how you must laugh at me!Yet am I glad I did not knowThat creatures of such tender bloom,Beneath their sanctuary snow,Were such cold ministers of doom;For had I known, as I beganTo love you, ere we flung apart,I had not been so glad a manAs holds his lady to his heart.And am I lonely here to-nightWith empty eyes, the cause is this,Your face it was that gave me sight,My heart ran over with your kiss.Still do I think that what I laidBefore the altar of your face,<...
Richard Le Gallienne
Rose Leaves When The Rose Is Dead
See how the rose leaves fallThe rose leaves fall and fade:And by the wall, in dusk funereal,How leaf on leaf is laid,Withered and soiled and frayed.How red the rose leaves fallAnd in the ancient trees,That stretch their twisted arms about the hall,Burdened with mysteries,How sadly sighs the breeze.How soft the rose leaves fallThe rose leaves drift and lie:And over them dull slugs and beetles crawl,And, palely glimmering by,The glow-worm trails its eye.How thick the rose leaves fallAnd strew the garden way,For snails to slime and spotted toads to sprawl,And, plodding past each day,Coarse feet to tread in clay.How fast they fall and fallWhere Beauty, carved in stone,With broken hands vei...
The Death Of Regret
I opened my shutter at sunrise, And looked at the hill hard by,And I heartily grieved for the comrade Who wandered up there to die.I let in the morn on the morrow, And failed not to think of him then,As he trod up that rise in the twilight, And never came down again.I undid the shutter a week thence, But not until after I'd turnedDid I call back his last departure By the upland there discerned.Uncovering the casement long later, I bent to my toil till the gray,When I said to myself, "Ah what ails me, To forget him all the day!"As daily I flung back the shutter In the same blank bald routine,He scarcely once rose to remembrance Through a month of my facing the scene.
To Caroline.
1.Think'st thou I saw thy beauteous eyes,Suffus'd in tears, implore to stay;And heard unmov'd thy plenteous sighs,Which said far more than words can say?2.Though keen the grief thy tears exprest,When love and hope lay both o'erthrown;Yet still, my girl, this bleeding breastThrobb'd, with deep sorrow, as thine own.3.But, when our cheeks with anguish glow'd,When thy sweet lips were join'd to mine;The tears that from my eyelids flow'dWere lost in those which fell from thine.4.Thou could'st not feel my burning cheek,Thy gushing tears had quench'd its flame,And, as thy tongue essay'd to speak,In sighs alone<...
George Gordon Byron
Au Revoir.
That morn our hearts were like artesian wells,Both deep and calm, and brimming with pure love.And in each one, like to an April day,Truth smiled and wept, while Courage wound his horn,Dispatching echoes that are whispering stillThrough all the vacant chambers of our souls;While Sorrow sat with drooped and aimless wing,Within the solitary fane of thought.We wished some warlike Joshua were thereTo make the sun stand still, or to put backThe dial to the brighter side of time.A cloud hung over Couchiching; a cloudEclipsed the merry sunshine of our hearts.We needed no philosopher to teachThat laughter is not always born of joy."All's for the best," the fair Eliza said;And we derived new courage from her lips,That spake the maxim of her trustin...
Charles Sangster
Death's Chill Between
(Athenaeum, October 14, 1848)Chide not; let me breathe a little, For I shall not mourn him long;Though the life-cord was so brittle, The love-cord was very strong.I would wake a little spaceTill I find a sleeping-place.You can go, - I shall not weep; You can go unto your rest.My heart-ache is all too deep, And too sore my throbbing breast.Can sobs be, or angry tears,Where are neither hopes nor fears?Though with you I am alone And must be so everywhere,I will make no useless moan, - None shall say 'She could not bear:'While life lasts I will be strong, -But I shall not struggle long.Listen, listen! Everywhere A low voice is calling me,And a step is on the sta...