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To My Husband On Our Wedding-Day.

Topics: classic

I leave for thee, beloved one,         The home and friends of youth,     Trusting my hopes, my happiness,         Unto thy love and truth;     I leave for thee my girlhood's joys,         Its sunny, careless mirth,     To bear henceforth my share amid         The many cares of earth.     And yet, no wild regret I give         To all that now I leave,     The golden dreams, the flow'ry wreaths         That I no more may weave;     The future that before me lies         A dark and unknown sea -     Whate'er may be its storms or shoals,         I brave them all with thee!     I will not tell thee now of love         Whose life, ere this, thou'st guessed,     And which, like sacred secret, long         Was treasured in my breast;     Enough that if thy lot be calm,         Or storms should o'er it sweep,     Thou'lt learn that it is woman's love,         Unchanging, pure and deep.     In this life's sunshine gild thy lot,         Bestowing wealth and pride,     Its light enjoying, I shall stand,         Rejoicing, at thy side;     But, oh! if thou should'st prove the griefs         That blight thy fellow-men,     'Twilt be my highest, dearest right,         To be, love, with thee then.     And thou, wilt thou not promise me         Thy heart will never change,     That tones and looks, so loving now,         Will ne'er grow stern and strange?     That thou'lt be kind, whatever faults         Or failings may be mine,     And bear with them in patient love,         As I will bear with thine?

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"I leave for thee, beloved one,..."

Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon's contribution to classic is further solidified by the brilliance found in "To My Husband On Our Wedding-Day."... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

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