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Poem by Albert Pike The Husband to His Wife Thy anguished bosom heaves no sigh, So well it can its woes control; Yet, gentle angel! how thine eye, With its calm sadness, racks my soul. I brought thee from thy happy home, To wed with want and wretchedness; And dost thou to my bosom come, And him who made thee wretched bless? In all but love, how poor we are! Yet thou wast cradled, dear, in ease; And I—forgive me gentle star! And bless me with one smile of peace! And thou art dying!—well, too well I see death's mark upon thy brow; Thine eyes the fatal message tell, That I must lose thee, even now, Dear love! reproach me not! Too hard Are now my own stern thoughts to bear; That I thy happiness have marred, And dimmed the jewel that I wear. Come, sing to me, as thou didst sing, Ere life had grown all grief and pain; Till sorrow to me cease to cling, And I become a boy again. Perhaps we may be happier, And yet some days of gladness see; If not,—ah,—death were welcomer Than one reproachful look from thee. Albert Pike Albert Pike's other poems:
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