In the hall-grounds, by evening-gloom concealed, He heard the solitary water-ram Beat sadly in the little wood-girt field, So dear to both! "Ah! wretched that I am!" He said, "and traitor to my love and hers! Why did I vent those words of wrath and spleen, That changed her cheek, and flushed her gentle mien? When will they yield her back, those jealous firs, Into whose shelter two days since she fled From my capricious anger, phantom-fed? When will her sire his interdict unsay, Or must I learn a lonely lot to bear, As this imprisoned engine, night and day, Piles its dull pulses in the darkness there?" | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...TO THE AUTHOR OF 'THE ROBBERS' (SCHILLER) by SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE THE JEW TO JESUS by FLORENCE KIPER FRANK A BALLAD OF TREES AND THE MASTER by SIDNEY LANIER SOLDIERS OF FREEDOM by KATHARINE LEE BATES THE PILGRIM by JOSEPH BEAUMONT TO JOSEPH JOACHIM by ROBERT SEYMOUR BRIDGES HE SAW MY HEART'S WOE by CHARLOTTE BRONTE TOWARDS DEMOCRACY: PART 3. EARLY MORNING by EDWARD CARPENTER |