Poems
Rosabel.

George P.

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I miss thee from my side, beloved,

I miss thee from my side;

And wearily and drearily

Flows Time's resistless tide.

The world, and all its fleeting joys,

To me are worse than vain,

Until I clasp thee to my heart,

Beloved one, again.

The wildwood and the forest-path,

We used to thread of yore,

With bird and bee have flown with thee,

And gone for ever more!

There is no music in the grove,

No echo on the hill;

But melancholy boughs are there—

And hushed the whip-poor-will.

I miss thee in the town, beloved,

I miss thee in the town;

From morn I grieve till dewy eve

Spreads wide its mantle brown.

My spirit's wings, that once could soar

In Fancy's world of air,

Are crushed and beaten to the ground

By life-corroding care.

No more I hear thy thrilling voice,

Nor see thy winning face;

That once would gleam like morning's beam,

In mental pride and grace:

Thy form of matchless symmetry,

In sweet perfection cast—

Is now the star of memory

That fades not with the past.

I miss thee everywhere, beloved,

I miss thee everywhere;

Both night and day wear dull away,

And leave me in despair.

The banquet-hall, the play, the ball,

And childhood's sportive glee,

Have lost their spell for me, beloved,

My souls is full of thee!

Has Rosabel forgotten me,

And love I now in vain?

If that be so, my heart can know

No rest on earth again.

A sad and weary lot is mine,

To love and be forgot;

A sad and weary lot beloved—

A sad and weary lot!

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