The lines were fill'd with many a tender thing, All the impassion'd heart's fond communing. I TOOK the scroll: I could not brook An eye to gaze on it save mine; I could not bear another's look Should dwell upon one thought of thine. My lamp was burning by my side, I held thy letter to the flame, I mark'd the blaze swift o'er it glide, It did not even spare thy name. Soon the light from the embers past, I felt so sad to see it die, So bright at first, so dark at last, I fear'd it was love's history. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE TENTH MUSE: THE PROLOGUE by ANNE BRADSTREET THE DESERTED HOUSE by MARY ELIZABETH COLERIDGE SONNET: 22. TO THE SAME [CYRIACK SKINNER] by JOHN MILTON THE BALLAD OF A DAFT GIRL by DOROTHY ALDIS VERSES, RESPECTFULLY & AFFECTIONALLY INSCRIBED TO PROFESSIONAL FRIEND by BERNARD BARTON |