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Sonnet LXXIII. Translation.

Topics: classic

He who a tender long-lov'd Wife survives,         Sees himself sunder'd from the only mind         Whose hopes, and fears, and interests, were combin'd,         And blended with his own. - No more she lives!      No more, alas! her death-numb'd ear receives         His thoughts, that trace the Past, or anxious wind         The Future's darkling maze! - His wish refin'd,         The wish to please, exists no more, that gives      The will its energy, the nerves their tone! -         He feels the texture of his quiet torn,         And stopt the settled course that Action drew;      Life stands suspended - motionless - till thrown         By outward causes, into channels new; -         But, in the dread suspense, how sinks the Soul forlorn!

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"He who a tender long-lov'd Wife survives,..."

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