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The Flood of Thessaly

The Girl of Provence, and Other Poems. By Barry Cornwall [i.e. Bryan Waller Procter]

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 VIII. 
VIII.
  
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VIII.

Why did I lose thee?—Wherefore was I sent
(Gently, 'tis true) away to banishment,
With such a passion clinging to my soul?—
I cannot tell thee half its huge controul,
Its fiery folly,—its so proud despair,
Its scorn,—aye of itself; nay, scorn of thee!
Dost thou not marvel how such things should be?
They were; but I am well;—and yet not thine!
. . . And thou hast passed from me!—Do I repine?—
I ask my heart in vain;—it answereth not.
My soul hath but one sight:—It looks alone
Into the future, and the past which shone
So bright is now (save some few dreams) forgot.
—A change now as I write is happening.
My mind doth re-assume its strength, and fling
Away Hate, Envy, Melancholy,—blind

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Errors which hung like clouds upon my mind,
And now I stand strong and with new born power
Arrayed, fit champion for a darker hour;
My sight is piercing bright: my reason free,
Unfettered, even by love for thee:—
Yet often, methinks, as I lie pondering
Under the evening boughs at sunset pale,
I hear thee,—like that strange voice wandering
Amongst the vernal thickets, ere winds bring
Perfume from roses or across the vale
Enchantments come from the lost nightingale,
Before the morn-fed lark her matin weaves,
Or the thrush whistles, or the stock-dove grieves,
I hear thee,—sweeter than all sounds that be;
I see thee, too, waving along:—I see
Thy black Italian glances, and they flash
Amorous delight upon me, till I dash
My burning forehead in the fringed stream,
And then I find thee (what thou art)—a dream!
This frets me, shakes me; but at last I rise
Emboldened by the pain, and through the skies

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All starry tracking my sublunar way,
Utter,—as poets used when Pindus lay
Open to Heavenly ears, and verse was strong
With fate and peril,—some prophetic song.—