ALEXIS! dear Alexis! lovely boy! O my Damon! O Palaemon! snatch'd away, To some far distant region gone, Has left the miserable Coridon Bereft of all his comforts, all alone! Have you not seen my gentle lad, Whom every swain did love, Cheerful, when every swain was sad, Beneath the melancholy grove? His face was beauteous as the dawn of day, Broke through the gloomy shades of night: O my anguish! my delight! @3Him@1 (ye kind shepherds) I bewail, Till my eyes and heart shall fail. 'Tis @3He@1 that's landed on that distant shore, And you and I shall see him here no more. Return, Alexis! O return! Return, return, in vain I cry; Poor Coridon shall never cease to mourn Thy too untimely, cruel destiny. Farewell for ever, charming boy! And with @3Thee@1, all the transports of my joy! Ye powers above, why should I longer live, To waste a few uncomfortable years, To drown myself in tears, For what my sighs and pray'rs can ne'er retrieve? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE DREAM by GEORGE GORDON BYRON ON FIRST ENTERING WESTMINSTER ABBEY by LOUISE IMOGEN GUINEY THE RELIEF OF LUCKNOW (SEPTEMBER 25, 1857) by ROBERT TRAILL SPENCE LOWELL SONNET: 15. TO THE LORD GENERAL FAIRFAX by JOHN MILTON THE HOUSE OF LIFE: 50. WILLOWWOOD (2) by DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI SOLITUDE by ELLA WHEELER WILCOX BEVERLY SHORE IN WINTER by THOMAS GOLD APPLETON PEARLS OF THE FAITH: 95, 96. AL-AZALI, AL-BAKI by EDWIN ARNOLD |