University of Virginia Library

Search this document 
The domestic affections

and other poems: By Felicia Dorothea Browne

expand section

But can remorse, despotic pow'r! prevail,
And wound thy bosom thro' the “twisted mail?”
Say, can his frown, by shudd'ring conscience felt,
Pierce the dark soul which mercy cannot melt?
No, tyrant! no, when conquest points thy way,
And lights thy track—the blood-path of dismay;
E'en then his darts, tho' barb'd with fiery pain,
Fall from thy woundless heart, averted by disdain!