For works with similar titles, see Farewell.
2279305PoemsFarewell1825Letitia Elizabeth Landon

Literary Gazette, 11th June, 1825, Page 379


ORIGINAL POETRY.
FAREWELL.

One word, altho' that word may pass
    Almost neglected by;
With no more care than what the glass
    Bears of a passing sigh:

One word to breathe of love to thee,
    One low, one timid word,
To say thou are beloved by me—
    But, rather felt than heard.

I would I were a favourite flower,
    Within thy hand to pine;
Life could not have a dearer power
    Than making such fate mine.

I would I were a tone of song,
    Upon thine ear to die;
A rose's breath, that, borne along,
    I might mix with thy sigh.

I do not wish thy heart were won;—
    Mine own, with such excess,
Would, like the flower beneath the sun,
    Die with its happiness.

I pray for thee on bended knee;
    But not for mine own sake;
My heart's best prayers are all for thee—
    It prays, itself to break.

Farewell! farewell! I would not leave
    A single trace behind:
Why should a thought of me to grieve,
    Be left upon thy mind?

I would not have thy memory dwell
    Upon one thought of pain;
And sad it must be, the farewell
    Of one who loved in vain.

Farewell! thy course is in the sun.
    First of the young, the brave:
For me, my race is nearly run,
    And its goal is the grave.L. E. L.