My days' delight, my springtime joys fordone, Which in the dawn and rising sun of youth Had their creation, and were first begun, Do in the evening and the winter sad, Present my mind, which takes my time's account, The grief remaining of the joy it had. For as no fortune stands, so no man's love Stays by the wretched and disconsolate; All old affections from new sorrows move. Moss to unburied bones, ivy to walls, Whom life and people have abandoned, Till th' one be rotten stays till th' other falls; But friendships, kindred, and love's memory Dies sole, extinguished hearing or beholding The voice of woe or face of misery; Who, being in all like those winter showers, Do come uncalled, but then forebear to fall When parching heat hath burnt both leaves and flowers; And what we sometime were we seem no more; Fortune hath changed our shapes, and destiny Defaced our very form we had before. For did in cinders any heat remain Of those clear fires of love and friendliness, I could not call for right and call in vain. Or had truth power the guiltless could not fall, Malice, vainglory, and revenge triumph; But truth alone cannot encounter all. All love and all desert of former times Malice hath covered from my sovereign's eyes, And largely laid abroad supposed crimes, Burying the former with their memory, Teaching offense to speak before it go, Disguising private hate with public duty. But mercy is fled to God that mercy made; Compassion dead, faith turned to policy, Which knows not those which sit in sorrow's shade. Cold walls, to you I speak, but you are senseless; Celestial powers, you heard, but have determined, And shall determine to the greatest happiness. To whom then shall I cry? To whom shall wrong Cast down her tears, or hold up folded hands? To her to whom remorse doth most belong, To her that is the first and may alone Be called Emp'ress of the Britons. Who should have mercy if a Queen have none? Who should resist strong hate, fierce injury, Or who relieve th' oppressed state of truth, Who is companion else to powerful majesty But you, great, godliest, powerful princess, Who have brought glory and posterity Unto this widow land and people hopeless? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...PROMETHEUS UNBOUND; A LYRICAL DRAMA IN FOUR ACTS by PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY INSCRIPTIONS: 3 by MARK AKENSIDE THE FRONTIER GUARD by ANTON ALEXANDER VON AUERSPERG THE EVICTION by WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT MAIDS AND MUSHROOMS by ABBIE FARWELL BROWN THE LAND OF DREAMS by WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT CONTENTMENT, OR, THE HAPPY WORKMAN'S SONG by JOHN BYROM EPIGRAM ON THE BRAZIERS' COMPANY HAVING RESOLVED by GEORGE GORDON BYRON |