WHENE'ER I think of old loves wan and dead, Of passion's wine outpoured in senseless dust, Of doomed affection's and long-buried trust, Through all my soul an arctic gloom is shed; And ah! I walk the world disquieted. Thou, my own love! white lily of April! must Thy beauty, perfume, radiance, all be thrust Earthward, to crumble in a grass-grown bed? Yea, sweet, 'tis even so! How long, how long The dust of her who once was tender Ruth, Hath mouldered dumbly! And how oft the clod, Which binds, like hers, all perished love and truth, Strives with pale weeds to veil death's hopeless wrong, Or through chill lips of flowers appeals to God! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A SUMMER EVENING'S MEDITATION by ANNA LETITIA BARBAULD THE HERO OF VIMY; AN INCIDENT OF THE GREAT WAR by BRENT DOW ALLINSON SONG OF THE FLOUR-MILL by EDWIN ARNOLD A LUNCHEON (THOMAS HARDY ENTERTAINS THE PRINCE OF WALES) by HENRY MAXIMILIAN BEERBOHM THE CONSOLATION OF PHILOSOPHY: BOOK 3 by ANICIUS MANLIUS SEVERINUS BOETHIUS |