Page:Poems Douglas.djvu/140

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134
the blighted heart.
Ah! no, 'twas like the glaring
Of torch-light, fitful shed
O'er sculptur'd features, wearing
The calmness of the dead:
But soon her eye assum'd
A clear, unearthly light,
Again her pale cheek bloom'd,
But its glow was strangely bright.

'Twas the hand of death imparted
That mockery of bloom,
Ere he led the blighted-hearted,
Love's victim to the tomb.
Spring's early flowers were spreading
Their bright leaves 'neath her feet,
But she turned aside from treading
O'er buds so young and sweet.

She knew the young flowers springing
So gaily round her path,
Kind hands should soon be flinging
O'er her lonely bed of death.
She thought on death unsighing,
Her wish was to depart;
Yet she breath'd one prayer, in dying,
For the loved one of her heart.