There is a charm in the pallid cheek; A charm which the tongue can never speak, When the hand of sickness has wither'd awhile, The rose which had bloom'd in the rays of a smile. There is a charm in the heavy eye, When the tear of sorrow is passing by, Like a summer shower o'er yon vault of blue, Or the violet trembling 'neath drops of dew. It spreads around a shade as light As daylight blending with the night; Or't is like the tints of an evening sky, And soft as the breathing of sorrow's sigh. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...REMEMBRANCE by EMILY JANE BRONTE TO THE PIOUS MEMORY OF THE YOUNG LADY MRS. ANNE KILLIGREW by JOHN DRYDEN SATIRES OF CIRCUMSTANCE: 9. AT THE ALTAR-RAIL by THOMAS HARDY LAURENCE BLOOMFIELD IN IRELAND: 2. FINLAY by WILLIAM ALLINGHAM THE BUS by MABEL WARREN ARNOLD THE SWAN; TO VICTOR HUGO by CHARLES BAUDELAIRE SANCTUARY by JOSIE CRAIG BERRY |