GOOD men, show, if you can tell, Where doth Human Pity dwell? Far and near her I would seek, So vexed with sorrow is my breast. 'She', they say, 'to all, is meek; And only makes th' unhappy blest.' Oh! if such a saint there be, Some hope yet remains for me: Prayer or sacrifice may gain From her implored grace relief; To release me of my pain, Or at the least to ease my grief. Young am I, and far from guile, The more is my woe the while: Falsehood with a smooth disguise My simple meaning hath abused: Casting mists before mine eyes, By which my senses are confused. Fair he is, who vowed to me That he only mine would be; But, alas, his mind is caught With every gaudy bait he sees: And too late my flame is taught That too much kindness makes men freeze. From me all my friends are gone, While I pine for him alone; And not one will rue my case, But rather my distress deride: That I think there is no place Where Pity ever yet did bide. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...JOHN KEATS (1) by GEORGE GORDON BYRON A SEA DIALOGUE by OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES THE MODERN MOTHER by ALICE MEYNELL THE OLD SWIMMIN'-HOLE by JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY SOLDIER: TWENTIETH CENTURY by ISAAC ROSENBERG LITTLE BERNHARD by JOHANNA AMBROSIUS SONG OF OWL'S HEAD by NORMAN WILLIAMS BINGHAM |