Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
England: Vols. I–IV. 1876–79.
To a Lady, on Leaving Her at Sidmouth
By George Crabbe (17541832)Y
That cruel Fortune has assigned me,—
Must go, and leave, with aching heart,
What most that heart adores behind me.
Till o’er the space the water rises,
Still shall in thought behind thee stand,
And watch the look affection prizes.
With eyes that speak his soul’s devotion,—
To thee as constant as the tide
That gives the restless wave its motion?
Forever gazing, smiling, talking?
Ah! would that he were sighing here,
And I were there beside thee walking!
Who is to that dear heart a stranger,
And with those matchless looks of thine
The peace of this poor youth endanger?
When night and death’s dull image hide thee:
In sleep, to thee my mind awakes;
Awake, it sleeps to all beside thee.
Of all this fierce and jealous feeling,
But for the hope to meet again,
And see those smiles all sorrow healing?
Lament that fate such friends should sever,
And I shall say, “We must not part”;
And thou wilt answer, “Never, never!”