The Poetical Works of Thomas Hood by Thomas Hood
page 79 of 982 (08%)
page 79 of 982 (08%)
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So when I behold me In an orb as bright, How thy soul doth fold me In its throne of light! Sorrow never paineth, Nor a care attaineth To that blessed height. THE FORSAKEN. The dead are in their silent graves, And the dew is cold above, And the living weep and sigh, Over dust that once was love. Once I only wept the dead, But now the living cause my pain: How couldst thou steal me from my tears, To leave me to my tears again? My Mother rests beneath the sod,-- Her rest is calm and very deep: I wish'd that she could see our loves,-- But now I gladden in her sleep. |
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