'TIS strange to think, if we could fling aside The mask and mantle many wear from pride, How much would be, we now so little guess, Deep in each heart's undream'd, unsought recess! The careless smile, like a bright banner borne; The laughlike merriment; the lip of scorn; And for a cloak, what is there that can be So difficult to pierce as gaiety? Too dazzling to be scanned, the gloomy brow Seems to hide something it would not avow; But mocking words, light laugh, and ready jest, These are the bars, the curtains to the breast. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...TO A FRIEND by WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS THE YANKEE'S RETURN FROM CAMP [JUNE, 1775] by EDWARD BANGS THE CAPTIVE LION by WILLIAM HENRY DAVIES SHILLIN' A DAY by RUDYARD KIPLING SPRING'S WELCOME, FR. ALEXANDER AND CAMPASPE by JOHN LYLY THE HOUSE OF LIFE: 82. HOARDED JOY by DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI |