Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THE HAUNTED HEART, by MARY L. LAWSON First Line: Tis true he ever lingers at her side Last Line: Like his who lives to mourn life's early years. | ||||||||
'TIS true he ever lingers at her side, But mark the wandering glances of his eye; A lover near a fond and plighted bride, With less of love than sorrow in his sigh! And well is it for her, that gentle maid, Who loves too well, too fervently, for fears; She deems not her devotion is repaid With deep repinings o'er life's early years. For oft another's image fills his breast, E'en when he breathes to her love's tender vow; While her soft hand within his own is prest, And timid blushes mantle her young brow, Fond memory whispers of the dreamy past, Its hopes and joys, its agony and tears; In vain from out his soul he strives to cast One shadowy form -- the love of early years. Ne'er from his heart the vision fades away; Amid the crowd, in silence, and alone, The stars by night, the clear blue sky by day, Bring to his mind the happiness now flown; A tone of song, the warbling of the birds, The simplest thing that memory endears, Can still recall the form, the voice, the words, Of her, the best beloved of early years. He dares not seek the spot where first they met, Too dangerous for his only hope of rest, His strong, but fruitless effort to forget Those scenes that wake deep sorrow in his breast; And yet the quiet beauty of the grove All plainly to his restless mind appears, Where, as the sun declined, he loved to rove With her, the first fond dream of early years. He sees the stream beside whose bank they stray'd, Engross'd in converse sweet of coming hours, And watch'd the rippling currents as they play'd In ebb and flow, upon the banks of flowers; And the old willow, 'neath whose spreading shades She own'd her love -- again her voice he hears, He starts -- alas! the vision only fades To leave regretful pangs for early years. It was his idle vanity that changed The pure, deep feelings of her trusting heart, Whose faithful love not even in thought had ranged, But worshipp'd him, from all the world apart; Now, cold and alter'd is her beaming eye, And no fond hope his aching bosom cheers, That she will shed one tear, or breathe one sigh, For him she loved so well in early years. He feels she scorns him with a bitter scorn; He questions not the justice of his fate, For long had she his selfish caprice borne, And wounded pride first taught her how to hate. Oh! ye who cast away a heart's deep love, Remember, ere affection disappears, That keen reproachful throbs your soul may move, Like his who lives to mourn life's early years. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...WHY I WRITE NOT OF LOVE by BEN JONSON SONNET: 86 by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE A CRADLE SONG by WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS I CLEANED MY HOUSE TODAY by KATHARINE CANBY BALDERSTON TO HIS LATE MAJESTY, CONCERNING..TRUE FORM OF ENGLISH POETRY by JOHN BEAUMONT AN EPITAPH ON SIR JOHN PROWDE, LIEUTENANT TO CHARLES MORGAN by WILLIAM BROWNE (1591-1643) WISDOM UNAPPLIED by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING OLD AND NEW; THE CENTURY ASSOCIATION, 1847-1897 by WILLIAM ALLEN BUTLER |
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