| The Poetical Works of George Barlow In Ten [Eleven] Volumes | 
|  | I. | 
|  | II. | 
|  | III. | 
|  | IV. | 
|  | V. | 
|  | I. | 
| I. | 
| II. | 
| III. | 
| IV. | 
| V. | 
| VI. | 
| VII. | 
| VIII. | 
| IX. | 
| X. | 
| XI. | 
| XII. | 
| XIII. | 
| XIV. | 
| XV. | 
| XVI. | 
| XVII. | 
| XVIII. | 
| XIX. | 
| XX. | 
| XXI. | 
| XXII. | 
| XXIII. | 
| XXIV. | 
| XXV. | 
| XXVI. | 
| XXVII. | 
| XXVIII. | 
| XXIX. | 
| XXX. | 
| XXXI. | 
| XXXII. | 
| XXXIII. | 
| XXXIV. | 
| XXXV. | 
| XXXVI. | 
| XXXVII. | 
| XXXVIII. | 
| XXXIX. | 
| XL. | 
| XLI. | 
| XLII. | 
| XLIII. | 
| XLIV. | 
|  | II. | 
|  | III. | 
|  | VI. | 
|  | VII. | 
|  | VIII. | 
|  | IX. | 
|  | X. | 
|  | XI. | 
|  | The Poetical Works of George Barlow |  | 
254
XXV. A DYING POET'S LOVE
When Heine lay upon his bed of pain
Helpless, the end being near,
Love sought his couch, and sought it like a fane,
Brightening the prospect drear.
Helpless, the end being near,
Love sought his couch, and sought it like a fane,
Brightening the prospect drear.
Young love was near him on that dying bed.
A young girl's gentle heart
Yearned over Heine's world-worn weary head
And worshipped Heine's Art.
A young girl's gentle heart
Yearned over Heine's world-worn weary head
And worshipped Heine's Art.
He loved her with the love intense and wild
A genius-spirit brings:
She on this earth of ours as yet a child,—
He 'mid the next world's kings.
A genius-spirit brings:
She on this earth of ours as yet a child,—
He 'mid the next world's kings.
So when he died, their spirits could not part.
She held him with her bloom;
She held him with her girlish young live heart:
He held her from the tomb.
She held him with her bloom;
She held him with her girlish young live heart:
He held her from the tomb.
|  | The Poetical Works of George Barlow |  |