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Poems (Gould, 1833)/The Consignment

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4694020Poems — The ConsignmentHannah Flagg Gould
THE CONSIGNMENT.
Fire, my hand is on the key,And the cabinet must ope!I shall now consign to thee,Things of grief, of joy, of hope.Treasured secrets of the heartTo thy care I hence entrust:Not a word must thou impart,But reduce them all to dust.
This—in childhood's rosy mornThis was gaily filled and sent.Childhood is forever gone;Here—devouring element.This was friendship's cherished pledge3Friendship took a colder form:Creeping on its gilded edge,May the blaze be bright and warm!
These—the letter and the token,Never more shall meet my view!When the faith has once been broken,Let the memory perish too!This—'t was penned while purest joyWarmed the heart and lit the eye:Fate that peace did soon destroy;And is transcript now will I!
This must go! for, on the sealWhen I broke the solemn yew,Keener was the pang than steel;'T was a heart-string breaking too!Here comes up the blotted leaf,Blistered o'er by many a tear.Hence! thou waking shade of grief!Go, forever disappear!
This is his, who seemed to beHigh as heaven, and fair as light;But the visor rose, and he—Spare, O memory! spare the sightOf the face that frowned beneath,While I take it, hand and name,And entwine it with a wreathOf the purifying flame!
These—the hand is in the grave,And the soul is in the skies,Whence they came! 'T is pain to saveCold remains of sundered ties!Go together, all, and burn,Once the treasures of my heart!Still, my breast shall be an urnTo preserve your better part!