1. HOW like a golden dream you met and parted, That pleasing straight doth vanish! O who can ever banish The thought of one so princely and free-hearted! But he was pulled up in his prime by fate, And love for him must mourn though all too late. Tears to the dead are due, let none forbid Sad hearts to sigh: true grief cannot be hid. 2. Yet the most bitter storm to height increased By heaven again is ceased: O time, that all things movest, In grief and joy thou equal measure lovest: Such the condition is of human life, Care must with pleasure mix and peace with strife: Thoughts with the days must change; as tapers waste, So must our griefs; day breaks when night is past. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SONG OF MARION'S MEN by WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT ON THE MEMORABLE VICTORY OF PAUL JONES by PHILIP FRENEAU THE BUILDING OF THE SHIP by HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW COWLEY: THE GARDEN by ALEXANDER POPE THE PROSPECTOR by ROBERT WILLIAM SERVICE THE FUNERAL TREE OF THE SOKOKIS by JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER |