Classic and Contemporary Poetry
NOTES OF AN INTERVIEW, by WILLIAM JOHNSON CORY Poet's Biography First Line: It is but little that remaineth Last Line: To the splendour breaking from you, though you veil it. Subject(s): Freedom; Lament; Liberty | ||||||||
It is but little that remaineth Of the kindness that you gave me, And that little precious remnant you withhold. Go free; I know that time constraineth, Wilful blindness could not save me: Yet you say I caused the change that I foretold. At every sweet unasked relenting, Though you'd tried me with caprice, Did my welcome, did my gladness ever fail? To-day not loud is my lamenting: Do not chide me; it shall cease: Could I think of vanished love without a wail? Elsewhere, you lightly say, are blooming All the graces I desire: Thus you goad me to the treason of content: If ever, when your brow is glooming, Softer faces I admire, Then your lightnings make me tremble and repent. Grant this: whatever else beguileth Restless dreaming, drowsy toil, As a plaything, as a windfall, let me hail it. Believe: the brightest one that smileth To your beaming is a foil, To the splendour breaking from you, though you veil it. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...LOVE THE WILD SWAN by ROBINSON JEFFERS AFTER TENNYSON by AMBROSE BIERCE QUARTET IN F MAJOR by WILLIAM MEREDITH CROSS THAT LINE by NAOMI SHIHAB NYE EMANCIPATION by ELIZABETH ALEXANDER MIMNERMUS IN CHURCH by WILLIAM JOHNSON CORY A BALLAD FOR A BOY by WILLIAM JOHNSON CORY A POOR FRENCH SAILOR'S SCOTTISH SWEETHEART by WILLIAM JOHNSON CORY |
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