So Lucy found at last the world was blind, Grieved for the bad, forgetful of the good, Until there came a friend who understood, Talked quietly and listened and was kind. She washed the bitterness from Lucy's mind Leaving instead sublimity of mood With rich companionship in solitude Of a peaceful heart unwrung and unconfined. People said, "She loved a soldier lad. Killed, poor fellow, in some little fight, The only lover that she ever had. Aren't the hills lovely here and clear to-night?" And Lucy kept a boarding school for girls, A quaint old lady, with old-fashioned curls. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...VENI CREATOR SPIRITUS by GREGORY I GOOD FRYDAY by JOSEPH BEAUMONT SANDY STAR: 4. THE WAY by WILLIAM STANLEY BRAITHWAITE A BOOK OF AIRS: SONG 18 by THOMAS CAMPION TOWARDS DEMOCRACY: PART 2. I HEARD THE VOICE OF THE WOODS by EDWARD CARPENTER AWAITING THE GUILLOTINE, 1794 by ANDRE MARIE CHENIER SUB DIVO by SAMUEL VALENTINE COLE TO AN UNFORTUNATE WOMAN, WHOM THE AUTHOR HAD KNOWN ... by SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE |