GOOD men, show, if you can tell, Where doth Human Pity dwell? Far and near her I would seek, So vexed with sorrow is my breast. 'She', they say, 'to all, is meek; And only makes th' unhappy blest.' Oh! if such a saint there be, Some hope yet remains for me: Prayer or sacrifice may gain From her implored grace relief; To release me of my pain, Or at the least to ease my grief. Young am I, and far from guile, The more is my woe the while: Falsehood with a smooth disguise My simple meaning hath abused: Casting mists before mine eyes, By which my senses are confused. Fair he is, who vowed to me That he only mine would be; But, alas, his mind is caught With every gaudy bait he sees: And too late my flame is taught That too much kindness makes men freeze. From me all my friends are gone, While I pine for him alone; And not one will rue my case, But rather my distress deride: That I think there is no place Where Pity ever yet did bide. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A SONG OF COURAGE by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON ECSTASY by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON SOUVENIR by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON AN EXPLANATION by JAMES WELDON JOHNSON ON VIOLET'S WAFERS, SENT ME WHEN I WAS ILL by SIDNEY LANIER ON THE PROPOSAL TO ERECT A MONUMENT IN ENGLAND TO LORD BYRON by EMMA LAZARUS |