University of Virginia Library


275

OH, LOVELY WERE ONCE HER EYES.

I.

Oh, lovely were once her eyes, but grief
Their light hath now o'erclouded;
And her lips were sweet, like the budding leaf,
Though now their bloom be shrouded—
For in her heart a malady,
Like the canker worm in the rose,
Preys ever there, unceasingly,
And gives her no repose.

II.

It is sad to think, in a few short hours,
We shall look on her no longer,
For the glance gives sign of the failing powers,
And the pang grows hourly stronger;
We shall lose the balm of her budding breath,
We shall hear her voice no more;
We shall see those sweet eyes sealed in death,
That we once could so adore.

III.

Yet shall I not weep, though losing all,
For many long days, I so have loved;
The tear that from mine eyes would fall,
My thought has well reproved:
For hers has been a dooméd life,
And those who love her well, should pray
That she may quickly lose the strife,
Which has eaten her heart away.