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Poems (E. L. F.)/Sad hours

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4573910Poems — Sad hoursE. L. F.
SAD HOURS. WRITTEN AT DRUMFORK, 1848
Hours, long hours of weariness are mine—
Hours that but tell of world's strife to thee;
'Tis well their anguish thou canst ne'er divine—
A mother's hopeless grief is a deep mystery.

Man's hopes and feelings, passions, active all,
Have scope, and play upon each thing of life;
How unlike woman's, that concentrate, fall
Back on the heart that wars not with its strife.

If thou wouldst keep dark thoughts from brooding near,
Or lift the sadness from the aching brow,
Keep back the fulness of the falling tear,
And let no heart-throb beat as mine does now.

Turn from thy thoughts and feelings, turn and give
Thy thoughts to others, lone, mayhap, as thee;
Or list affection's calling—turn and live—
This world bears each his load of misery.

The tones of duty flit across the mind,
But love's soft whisper deepens in the heart;
Let both their echo in my sadness find,
And wake my being to its brighter part.