Landon in The Literary Gazette 1824/Remembrance

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For works with similar titles, see Remembrance.
For works with similar titles, see Fragment (Letitia Elizabeth Landon).
Poems (1824)
by Letitia Elizabeth Landon
Fragments. 5th Series. Remembrance.
2258467PoemsFragments. 5th Series. Remembrance.1824Letitia Elizabeth Landon

Literary Gazette, 31st January, 1824, Page 74


REMEMBRANCE.[1]

That Portrait! aye, it was a lovely face.
Those eyes, like violets on which the sun
Has looked as favourites; the long dark lash,
Sweet twilight to their playfulness; that brow,
Open as morning, white as Indian pearl,
Shadowed by those light clouds of pale brown hair,
Braided by lilies pure as she herself:—
It looks just what she was, all youth, all life,
All girlish innocence and happiness.
We were companions in our youth: we loved
With that first love life never quite forgets.
We parted,—parted too without a hope!
Hope waits on Fortune. After many years
I saw my early idol once again:
How changed, yet still how very beautiful!
Pride sat upon her brow, a reckless scorn
Mingled with bitterness in each light word,
And sorrow, ill concealed, seemed at her heart:
Yet had she wedded, and won rank and wealth,
But once we met; how deep the tenderness
That softened her so lovely countenance,
When, with a voice half music and half sorrow,
She gently said, "The seared heart doth not break."


  1. Signature after later poem