INGRATITUDE, how deadly is the smart Thou giv'st, inhabiting the form we love! How light compared all other sorrows prove! Thou shed'st a night of woe -- from whence depart The gentle beams of patience, that the heart Midst lesser ills illume. Thy victims rove, Unquiet as the ghost that haunts the grove Where murder spilt the life-blood. O! thy dart Kills more than life -- ev'n all that makes it dear; Till we 'the sensible of pain' would change For frenzy, that defies the bitter tear; Or wish in kindred callousness to range Where moon-eyed Idiocy, with fallen lip, Drags the loose knee and intermitting step. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...FOREFATHERS by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN A PRAYER by PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR STOPPING BY WOODS ON A SNOWY EVENING by ROBERT FROST THE LAKE (VERSION 2) by EDGAR ALLAN POE IN MEMORIAM A.H.H.: 129 by ALFRED TENNYSON THALIA by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH CITY AND VILLAGE by ALEXANDER ANDERSON FRAGMENTS INTENDED FOR DEATH'S JEST-BOOK: MAN'S GUARD AGAINST DEATH by THOMAS LOVELL BEDDOES |