The Unforgotten

Have you not forgotten me?
How could I forget you,
My dear love, my true love, my own sweet heart?
Life brings many changes,
And women's hearts are fickle,
And time brings other lovers to lovers torn apart.

Soon you'll have forgotten me
How could I forget you,
When, day and night, I'm longing to be lying at your side?
Life brings many changes;
And I might forget you, living —
But how could I forget you, now that you have died!

Love-Songs

1. The Student

As I once in Salamanca,
(Whilst the nightingales o'erhead
Sweetly in the trees were singing),
Eagerly in Homer read:

How, arrayed in rich apparel,
Helen to the rampart went,
Shewing to the Trojan senate
Grace with bloom so sweetly blent,

That distinctly this and that one
Muttered in his hoary beard:
" Sooth, she comes of race immortal,

The Loves of the Poets

Introduction.

Since the very God of Numbers
Pallid grew with love's unrest,
Since the laurel round his temples
Token gives of love unblest,

Who can wonder, that but seldom
Shineth out a star benign
O'er the fate of mortal minstrels
Circled with the wreath divine?

That their looks are sad and earnest,
Mournful oft their music's strain;
That of bliss they sing but little,

Regret

I said a thoughtless word one day,
A loved one heard and went away;
I cried: " Forgive me, I was blind;
I would not wound or be unkind. "
I waited long, but all in vain,
To win my loved one back again.
Too late, alas! to weep and pray,
Death came; my loved one passed away.
Then, what a bitter fate was mine!
No language could my grief define;
Ah! deep regret could not unsay
The thoughtless word I spoke that day.

A Homing Song

Oh, fierce is the heat,
And weary is the street,
And all day long
It is work, work, work!
But farewell work
For love and a song,
When twilight's come
And the heart turns home.
Oh, the nest for the bird,
And the hive for the bee,
And home, home, home
For my dearies and me!

Oh, care flies far
From the twilight star;
And the long, kind night
It is love, love, love!
And warm breathes love,
Breathes low, breathes light,
O'er the small, kissed faces

Extinguished Love

We were as if new-born — so brightly-dyed
On us the light of love's soft morning beamed.
How, Laura! glowed thy lips! thy features gleamed!
How flashed thine eyes! how swelled thy heart's full tide!
Me, too, what founts of love revivified!
With higher thoughts my restless bosom teemed,
So that my wonted sleep I needless deemed;
A briefer waking dream its place supplied.
Yes, love is higher life in common things;
Such were the tokens of its living fires
Which now I seek, in thee or me, in vain;

Keats

He dwelt with the bright gods of elder time,
On earth and in their cloudy haunts above.
He loved them: and in recompense sublime,
The gods, alas! gave him their fatal love.

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