One Struggle More, And I Am Free
by George Gordon, Lord Byron
1
- One struggle more, and I am free
- From pangs that rend my heart in twain;
- One last long sigh to love and thee,
- Then back to busy life again.
- It suits me well to mingle now
- With things that never pleased before!
- Though every joy is fled below,
- What future grief can touch me more?
2
- Then bring me wine, the banquet bring;
- Man was not formd to live alone:
- Ill be that light, unmeaning thing
- That smiles with all, and weeps with none.
- It was not thus in days more dear,
- It never would have been, but thou
- Hast fled, and left me lonely here;
- Thourt nothingall are nothing now.
3
- In vain my lyre would lightly breathe!
- The smile that sorrow fain would wear
- But mocks the woe that lurks beneath,
- Like roses oer a sepulchre.
- Though gay companions oer the bowl
- Dispel awhile the sense of ill :
- Though pleasure fires the maddening soul,
- The heart,the heart is lonely still!
4
- On many a lone and lovely night
- It soothd to gaze upon the sky;
- For then I deemd the heavenly light
- Shone sweetly on thy pensive eye:
- And oft I thought at Cynthias noon,
- When sailing oer the Ægean wave,
- Now Thyrza gazes on that moon
- Alas, it gleamd upon her grave!
5
- When stretchd on fevers sleepless bed,
- And sickness shrunk my throbbing veins,
- Tis comfort still, I faintly said,
- That Thyrza cannot know my pains:
- Like freedom to the time-worn slave,
- A boon tis idle then to give,
- Relenting Nature vainly gave
- My life, when Thyrza ceased to live!
6
- My Thyrzas pledge in better days,
- When love and life alike were new!
- How different now thou meetst my gaze!
- How tinged by time with sorrows hue!
- The heart that gave itself with thee
- Is silentah, were mine as still!
- Though cold as een the dead can be,
- It feels, it sickens with the chill.
7
- Thou bitter pledge! thou mournful token!
- Though painful, welcome to my breast!
- Still, still preserve that love unbroken,
- Or break the heart to which thourt pressd.
- Time tempers love, but not removes,
- More hallowd when its hope is fled:
- Oh! what are thousand living loves
- To that which cannot quit the dead?
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