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Ah, Hast Thou Gone?

Topics: classic

Ah, hast thou gone from him whose breast     Bleeds with the thought we are apart,     Whose tears fall vainly and unblest,     Whose all--a crushed--a broken heart!     Thou hastenest on Life's thorny way     Where torrid suns the mountains burn,     Where parch the thirsty plains--yet say,     Oh, say thou wilt to me return.     Beyond the rolling wave art thou     O'er which I waft a sigh to thee,     Beyond the lurid sunset now     Ablaze upon the western sea.     Oh, think of him whose only thought     That thought which Friendship cannot tell,     While flows the burning tear unsought,     He loved, alas, he loved too well.     Farewell to thee than whom all joy     No brighter vision e'er can lend,     Go, he will be to thee, my boy,     A brother--more than that--a friend.

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"Ah, hast thou gone from him whose breast..."

Lennox Amott's contribution to classic is further solidified by the brilliance found in "Ah, Hast Thou Gone?"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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"I.     I take my goosequill for some recreation, ..."

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