SHE might be lovely, if the night, Carved in some chapel's dark recess By Buonarotti's chilling might, May claim the praise of loveliness. Good was she, if it goodness reach To give an alms in passing by Without one feeling, look, or speech-- If loveless gold be charity. And she could think, if that you deem In soft and modulated tone To babble like a ceaseless stream Is proof of thought--else had she none. She used to pray, if two fine eyes, Now coldly fastened on the ground, Now raised as coldly to the skies, Worthy the name of prayer be found. She would have smiled, if blighted flower That ne'er expanded to the sky Could open to the genial power Of winds that pass it heedless by. She might have wept, if when there lay Her hand on what she called her heart, She e'er had felt that human clay Softened by dews the heavens impart. She might have loved, but selfish pride, Like lamps a useless light that hold, Standing the coffined dead beside, Guarded her heart, so poor and cold. She's dead; she never lived, she stopt At seeming, seemed to live, though dead. The volume from her hand has dropt, From which no single word she read. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...LINES ON HEARING THE ORGAN by CHARLES STUART CALVERLEY MISS KILMANSEGG AND HER PRECIOUS LEG: HER BIRTH by THOMAS HOOD EVEN SO by DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI THE PLEASURES OF IMAGINATION: BOOK 2 by MARK AKENSIDE FOUR SONNETS: 4 by FRANK DAVIS ASHBURN ON A PIECE OF UNWROUGHT PIPECLAY by JOHN FREDERICK BRYANT L'AMITIE EST L'AMOUR SANS AILES by GEORGE GORDON BYRON FOURTH BOOK OF AIRS: SONG 1. A LITTLE BREATH I'LL BORROW by THOMAS CAMPION |