Ballad Of Human Life

Thomas Lovell Beddoes 1803 (Clifton, Bristol) – 1849 (Basel)



WHEN we were girl and boy together,  
 We toss’d about the flowers  
 And wreath’d the blushing hours  
Into a posy green and sweet.  
 I sought the youngest, best,
 And never was at rest  
Till I had laid them at thy fairy feet.  
But the days of childhood they were fleet,  
 And the blooming sweet-briar-breath’d weather,  
 When we were boy and girl together.
 
Then we were lad and lass together,  
 And sought the kiss of night  
 Before we felt aright,  
Sitting and singing soft and sweet.  
 The dearest thought of heart
 With thee ’t was joy to part,  
And the greater half was thine, as meet.  
Still my eyelid’s dewy, my veins they beat  
 At the starry summer-evening weather,  
 When we were lad and lass together.
 
And we are man and wife together,  
 Although thy breast, once bold  
 With song, be clos’d and cold  
Beneath flowers’ roots and birds’ light feet.  
 Yet sit I by thy tomb,
 And dissipate the gloom  
With songs of loving faith and sorrow sweet.  
And fate and darkling grave kind dreams do cheat,  
 That, while fair life, young hope, despair and death are,  
 We ’re boy and girl, and lass and lad, and man and wife together.

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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 14, 2023

1:00 min read
77

Quick analysis:

Scheme ABBCDDCCAA AXCCEECCAA AFFCGGCCXA
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 1,156
Words 203
Stanzas 3
Stanza Lengths 10, 10, 10

Thomas Lovell Beddoes

Thomas Lovell Beddoes was an English poet, dramatist and physician. more…

All Thomas Lovell Beddoes poems | Thomas Lovell Beddoes Books

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