Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Stanzas.[591] by George Gordon Byron
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Stanzas.[591]

    By George Gordon Byron



1.

    Could Love for ever
    Run like a river,
    And Time's endeavour
    Be tried in vain -
    No other pleasure
    With this could measure;
    And like a treasure[ik]
    We'd hug the chain.
    But since our sighing
    Ends not in dying,
    And, formed for flying,
    Love plumes his wing;
    Then for this reason
    Let's love a season;
    But let that season be only Spring.


2.

    When lovers parted
    Feel broken-hearted,
    And, all hopes thwarted,
    Expect to die;
    A few years older,
    Ah! how much colder
    They might behold her
    For whom they sigh!
    When linked together,
    In every weather,[il]
    They pluck Love's feather
    From out his wing -
    He'll stay for ever,[im]
    But sadly shiver
    Without his plumage, when past the Spring.[in]

3.

    Like Chiefs of Faction,
    His life is action -
    A formal paction
    That curbs his reign,
    Obscures his glory,
    Despot no more, he
    Such territory
    Quits with disdain.
    Still, still advancing,
    With banners glancing,
    His power enhancing,
    He must move on -
    Repose but cloys him,
    Retreat destroys him,
    Love brooks not a degraded throne.

4.

    Wait not, fond lover!
    Till years are over,
    And then recover
    As from a dream.
    While each bewailing
    The other's failing.
    With wrath and railing,
    All hideous seem -
    While first decreasing,
    Yet not quite ceasing,
    Wait not till teasing,
    All passion blight:
    If once diminished
    Love's reign is finished -
    Then part in friendship, - and bid good-night.[io]

5.

    So shall Affection
    To recollection
    The dear connection
    Bring back with joy:
    You had not waited[ip]
    Till, tired or hated,
    Your passions sated
    Began to cloy.
    Your last embraces
    Leave no cold traces -
    The same fond faces
    As through the past:
    And eyes, the mirrors
    Of your sweet errors,
    Reflect but rapture - not least though last.


6.

    True, separations[iq]
    Ask more than patience;
    What desperations
    From such have risen!
    But yet remaining,
    What is't but chaining
    Hearts which, once waning,
    Beat 'gainst their prison?
    Time can but cloy love,
    And use destroy love:
    The wingéd boy, Love,
    Is but for boys -
    You'll find it torture
    Though sharper, shorter,
    To wean, and not wear out your joys.

    December 1, 1819.

                [First published, New Monthly Magazine, 1832, vol. xxxv. pp. 310-312.]



Extra Info:
[591] {549}["A friend of Lord Byron's, who was with him at Ravenna when he wrote these stanzas, says, They were composed, like many others, with no view of publication, but merely to relieve himself in a moment of suffering. He had been painfully excited by some circumstances which appeared to make it necessary that he should immediately quit Italy; and in the day and the hour that he wrote the song was labouring under an access of fever" (Works, 1832, xii. 317, note 1). Here, too, there is some confusion of dates and places. Byron was at Venice, not at Ravenna, December 1, 1819, when these lines were composed. They were sent, as Lady Blessington testifies, to Kinnaird, and are probably identical with the "mere verses of society," mentioned in the letter to Murray of May 8, 1820. The last stanza reflects the mood of a letter to the Countess Guiccioli, dated November 25 (1819), "I go to save you, and leave a country insupportable to me without you" (Letters, 1900, iv. 379, note 2).]

[ik] And as a treasure. - [MS. Guiccioli.]

[il] {550}

Through every weather
We pluck. - [MS. G.]

[im]

He'll sadly shiver
And droop for ever,
Shorn of the plumage which sped his spring. - [MS. G.]

[in] - - that sped his Spring. - [MS. G.]

[io] {551}

His reign is finished
One last embrace, then, and bid good-night. - [MS. G.]

[ip]

You have not waited
Till tired and hated
All passions sated. - [MS. G.]

[iq] {552}True separations. - [MS. G.]


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