HAVE I not learned to live without thee yet? -- Years joined to scornful years have mocked my pain; Light-footed joys have proffered transient gain, And smiled on me, and wooed me to forget; And lesser loves my pathway have beset With cheap enticements. Since my heart was fain, Sometimes I listened, but their boast was vain, -- They had no coin to pay the old time's debt. And thou? Thou art at rest, and far away From all the vain delusions of the hour; Like some forsaken child, I weep by night, While thou rejoicest in thy perfect day: Thine is the triumph, thine the immortal power, -- Art thou too glad to mourn for earth's delight? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...DAY: MORNING by JOHN CUNNINGHAM ON MUSIC by WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR ON THE LATE S.T. COLERIDGE by WASHINGTON ALLSTON THE HUSBAND'S PETITION by WILLIAM EDMONSTOUNE AYTOUN IN THE WHITE LAND by KONSTANTIN DMITRIYEVICH BALMONT BALLADE OF MID-WINTER NIGHTS by CHARLOTTE LOUISE BERTLESEN LOUISA; A TALE by JANE BOWDLER |