THEN, 'twas the fancy of a fevered mind That told me I was cast from your regard? I felt as one that being of late bestarred With honours hath by high command resigned Each glittering badge -- and now once more may bind These on his breast! I was o'erworn and jarred; I thought you for a moment cold and hard; I know you now for ever just and kind. Your written word brings life, and I can see Those woodlands, and that terrace, whence you gaze On the loved hills that were my early friends. Too soon the hour of Youth's sweet turmoil ends; But I shall hold in perpetuity The bloom and odour of this day of days. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ELEGY: 16. ON HIS MISTRESS by JOHN DONNE THE ENEMY'S PORTRAIT by THOMAS HARDY WHEN FIRST MY WAY by ALFRED EDWARD HOUSMAN ROSE AYLMER by WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR ZINNIAS by ANNA EMILIA BAGSTAD THE STEALING OF THE MARE; AN ARABIC EPIC OF THE TENTH CENTURY by WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT OCTOBER XXIX, 1795 (KEATS' BIRTHDAY) by WILLIAM STANLEY BRAITHWAITE |