SWEET spirit! if thy airy sleep Nor sees my tears, nor hears my sighs, Oh! I will weep, in luxury weep, Till the last heart's-drop fills mine eyes. But if thy sainted soul can feel, And mingles in our misery; Then, then, my breaking heart I'll seal -- Thou shalt not hear one sigh from me! The beam of morn was on the stream, But sullen clouds the day deform: Thou wert, indeed, that morning beam, And death, alas! that sullen storm. Thou wert not form'd for living here, For thou wert kindred with the sky; Yet, yet we held thee all so dear, We thought thou wert not form'd to die! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...AT MIDSUMMER by LOUISE CHANDLER MOULTON THE HOUSE OF LIFE: 36. LIFE-IN-LOVE by DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI THE OTHER WORLD by HARRIET BEECHER STOWE ONE'S-SELF I SING by WALT WHITMAN WHEN THE SULTAN GOES TO ISPAHAN by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH A POETICAL VERSION OF A LETTER, FROM THE EARL OF ESSEX TO SOUTHAMPTON by JOHN BYROM ATTACH TO ALPHONSO FERRABOSCO'S 'AIRS': TO THE WORTHY AUTHOR by THOMAS CAMPION THE NIGHT HERDER by CHARLES BADGER CLARK JR. THE MADMAN AND THE LETHARGIST, AN EXAMPLE by SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE |