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Poems

By Alfred Domett
  
  

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DESPAIR.

[_]

(FROM THE SAME.)

The goaded soul will madly try
Distracted from its woes to fly—
Try every slenderest hope in vain;
The blasting sense returns again,

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The sense of utter helplessness—
Till, wearied with its wild distress,
It sinks beneath the barren blight
Of dark Despair's o'ershadowing might!
A bitter calm—unlike the roar
The fierce waves madly made before,
While o'er them yet the vessel bore;
But like the waters settling dark
And silent o'er the sinking bark!