I give thee sorrow, and I give thee pain: 'Tis all the troubled singer has to give! This, this is all thy guerdon while I live, And, now and then, the pleasure of a strain. Not more can I bestow while I remain On earth an outcast and a wayfarer, With all the night's harsh dewdrops in my hair; This scant reward and piteous thou shalt gain! But after death there comes my time of pleasure When I may crown thee in more ample measure, Fill up thy coronet with golden bars: First friendship through the agony of earth; Then heaven and close-bound hearts that sing for mirth! First sorrow; then a crown of many stars! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...VOICES OF THE AIR by KATHERINE MANSFIELD GOD EVERYWHERE by ABRAHAM IBN EZRA A DEDICATION by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH PEACE ON EARTH by LOUISA SARAH BEVINGTON A COUNTRY GOD by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN HINC LACHRIMAE; OR THE AUTHOR TO AURORA: 30 by WILLIAM BOSWORTH A FRAGMENT FOUND IN A LECTURE-ROOM by SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE |