Nay, read it not, thou wouldst not know What lives within my heart, For from that fount it does not flow; 'Tis but the voice of Art. I could not bid my proud heart speak, Before the idle throng; Rather in silence would it break With its full tide of Song. Yes, rather would it break, than bare, To cold and careless eyes, The hallowed dreams that linger there, The tears and agonies. My lyre is skillful to repress Each deep, impassioned tone; Its gushing springs of tenderness Would flow for one alone. The rock, that to the parching sand Would yield no dewy drop, Struck by the pilgrim prophet's wand, Gave all its treasures up. My heart then, is my only lyre; The prophet hath not spoken, Nor kindled its celestial fire; So, let its chords be broken. I would not thou shouldst hear those lays, Though harsh they might not be; Though thou, perchance, might'st hear and praise, Thy would not speak of me. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE SACRAL DREAMS OF RAMON FERNANDEZ by JAMES GALVIN FROM FRANCE by ISAAC ROSENBERG SONNETS FROM THE PORTUGUESE: 13 by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING AND WHAT SHALL YOU SAY? by JOSEPH SEAMON COTTER JR. PASSION AND LOVE by PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR TO A CHILD EMBRACING HIS MOTHER by THOMAS HOOD GEORGE WASHINGTON by JOHN HALL INGHAM SONNET: 14. ON THE RELIGIOUS MEMORY OF CATHERINE THOMASON by JOHN MILTON |