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The Open Gates.

Topics: classic

My heart was sad when first we met;     'Yet with a smile, -     A welcome smile I ne'er forget,     Thou didst beguile     My sighs and sorrows;-and a sweet delight     Shed a soft radiance, where erst was night.     I dreamed not we should meet again; -     But fate was kind,     Once more my heart o'er fraught with pain,     To joy inclined.     It seemed thy soul had power to penetrate     My inmost self, changing at will my state.     Then sprang the thought: - Be thou my Queen!     I will be slave;     Make here thy throne and reign supreme,     'Tis all I crave.     Let me within thy soothing influence dwell,     Content to know, with thee all must be well.     I knew not that another claimed     By prior right,     Those charms that had my breast inflamed     With fancies bright.     Ah! then I recognized my loneliness: -     My dreams dispelled; - still I admired no less.     Time wearily dragged on its way, -     We met once more,     And thou wert free! Oh, happy day!     As sight of shore     Cheers the worn mariner; - so sight of thee,     Made my heart beat with sweet expectancy.     Is it too much to hope, - someday     This heart of mine,     That beats alone for thee, - yet may     Thy love enshrine?     All things are said to come to him who waits,     I'm waiting, darling. - Love, opes wide the gates.

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"My heart was sad when first we met;..."

This evocative piece by John Hartley, titled "The Open Gates.", represents a masterful exploration of classic. The lines capture a profound emotional resonance... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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