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THE TROUBADOUR.
145


    Methought that conscious beauty threw
    Upon her cheek its own sweet hue,
    Its loveliness of morning red;
    I woke, and gazed upon the dead.
    I mark'd the fearful stains which now
    Were dark'ning o'er the once white brow,
    The livid colours that declare
    The soul no longer dwelleth there.
    The gaze of even my fond eye,
    Seem'd almost like impiety,
    As it were sin for looks to be
    On what the earth alone should see.
    I thought upon the loathsome doom
    Of the grave's cold, corrupted gloom;—
    Oh, never shall the vile worm rest
    A lover on thy lip and breast!