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Classic poem

The Lost Friend

by Amy Levy

The people take the thing of course,

They marvel not to see

This strange, unnatural divorce

Betwixt delight and me.

I know the face of sorrow, and I know

Her voice with all its varied cadences;

Which way she turns and treads; how at her ease

Things fit her dreary largess to bestow.

Where sorrow long abides, some be that grow

To hold her dear, but I am not of these;

Joy is my friend, not sorrow; by strange seas,

In some far land we wandered, long ago.

O faith, long tried, that knows no faltering!

O vanished treasure of her hands and face!--

Beloved--to whose memory I cling,

Unmoved within my heart she holds her place.

And never shall I hail that other "friend,"

Who yet shall dog my footsteps to the end.

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Public domain/Source

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