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Wilfrid Scawen Blunt - Alfred TennysonWilfrid Scawen Blunt - Alfred Tennyson
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Tears, idle tears! Ah, who shall bid us weep, Now that thy lyre, O prophet, is unstrung? What voice shall rouse the dull world from its sleep And lead its requiem as when Grief was young, And thou in thy rapt youth, Time`s bards among, Captured our ears, and we looked up and heard Spring`s sweetest music on thy mourning tongue And knew thee for Pain`s paradisal bird. We are alone without thee in our tears, Alone in our mute chauntings. Vows are vain To tell thee how we loved thee in those years Nor dream to look upon thy like again. We know not how to weep without thy aid, Since all that tears would tell thyself hast said.
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