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Home  »  library  »  Song  »  Maria Gowen Brooks (Maria del Occidente) (1794?–1845)

C.D. Warner, et al., comp.
The Library of the World’s Best Literature. An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.

Maria Gowen Brooks (Maria del Occidente) (1794?–1845)

Disappointment

THE BARD has sung, God never formed a soul

Without its own peculiar mate, to meet

Its wandering half, when ripe to crown the whole

Bright plan of bliss most heavenly, most complete.

But thousand evil things there are that hate

To look on happiness: these hurt, impede,

And leagued with time, space, circumstance, and fate,

Keep kindred heart from heart, to pine and pant and bleed.

And as the dove to far Palmyra flying

From where her native founts of Antioch beam,

Weary, exhausted, longing, panting, sighing,

Lights sadly at the desert’s bitter stream,—

So many a soul, o’er life’s drear desert faring,

Love’s pure congenial spring unfound, unquaffed,

Suffers—recoils—then, thirsty and despairing

Of what it would, descends and sips the nearest draught!