To the willows of the brookside
The mill wheel sings to-day-
Sings and weeps,
As the brooklet creeps
Wondering on its way;
And here is the ring she gave me
With love's sweet promise then-
It hath burst apart
Like the trusting heart
That may never be soothed again!
Oh, I would be a minstrel
To wander far and wide,
Weaving in song the merciless wrong
Done by a perjured bride!
Or I would be a soldier,
To seek in the bloody fray
What gifts of fate can compensate
For the pangs I suffer to-day!
Yet may this aching bosom,
By bitter sorrow crushed,
Be still and cold
In the churchyard mould
Ere thy sweet voice be hushed;
So sing, sing on forever,
O wheel of the brookside mill,
For you mind me again
Of the old time when
I felt love's gracious thrill.
The Broken Ring
Eugene Field
(1)
Poem topics: I love you, fate, heart, never, soldier, song, sorrow, time, forever, voice, wide, mind, cold, wrong, bride, bitter, promise, gracious, I miss you, sweet, Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
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About The Broken Ring
The Broken Ring is a poem by Eugene Field. This page includes the poem text, poet information, related topics, comments, and similar poems.
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