Page:The Poetical Works of William Motherwell, 1849.djvu/434

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350


For me, my friend, I fear there's nought.
In dim futurity, of gladness;
There ever rises on my thought
A dream of sadness:

Yet gazing upon guileless faces,
Sunned by the light of laughing eyes,
I recreant were to own no traces
Of social ties.

Even I may borrow from another
The smile I fain would call my own,
Striving, with childish art, to smother
The care unknown.

Farewell! Farewell!—All good attend thee—
At home, abroad—on land, or sea—
That Heaven may evermore befriend thee,
My prayer shall be!

Should a dark thought of him arise
Whose parting hand thou must resign,
Let it go forth to stormy skies,
Not tarnish thine: