by Letitia Elizabeth Landon (1802 - 1838)
It is the last token of love and of...
Language: English
It is the last token of love and of thee! Thy once faith is broken, thou false one to me. I think on the letters with which I must part; Too dear are the fetters which wind round my heart. Thy words were enchanted — and ruled me at will; My spirit is haunted, remembering them still. So earnest, so tender — the full heart was there; Ah! song might surrender its lute in despair. I deemed that I knew thee as none ever knew; That 'twas mine to subdue thee, and thine to be true. I deemed to my keeping thy memory had brought The depths that were sleeping of innermost thought. The bitter concealings life’s treacheries teach, The long-subdued feelings the world cannot reach — Thy mask to the many was worn not for me; I saw thee — can any seem like unto thee? No other can know thee as I, love, have known; No future will show thee a love like mine own. That love was no passion that walketh by day, A fancy — a fashion that flitteth away. ’Twas life’s whole emotion — a storm in its might — ’Twas deep as the ocean, and silent as night. It swept down life’s flowers, the fragile and fair, The heart had no powers from passion to spare. Thy faults but endear’d thee, so stormy and wild; My lover! I fear’d thee as feareth a child. They seemed but the shrouding of spirit too high, As vapours come crowding the sunniest sky. I worshipped in terror a comet above; Ah! fatal the error — ah! fatal the love! For thy sake life never will charm me again; Its beauty forever is vanish’d and vain. Thou canst not restore me the depth and the truth Of the hopes that came o’er me in earliest youth. Their gloss is departed—their magic is flown, And sad and faint-hearted I wander alone. ’Tis vain to regret me — you will not regret; You will try to forget me — you cannot forget. We shall hear of each other — oh! misery to hear Those names from another that once were so dear! What slight words will sting us that breathe of the past, And slight things will bring us thoughts fated to last. The fond hopes that centred in thee are all dead, But the iron has enter’d the soul where they fed. Like others in seeming, we’ll walk through life’s part, Cold, careless, and dreaming, — with death in the heart. No hope — no repentance; the spring of life o’er; All died with that sentence —— I love thee no more!
About the headline (FAQ)
Confirmed with Letitia Elizabeth Landon (L. E. L.) in Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book, 1836 (1835), pages 10-11. The poem is preceded by the following epigram:
"A fair young face — yet mournful in its youth — Brooding above sad thoughts."
Text Authorship:
- by Letitia Elizabeth Landon (1802 - 1838), "The Lily of the Valley" [author's text checked 1 time against a primary source]
Musical settings (art songs, Lieder, mélodies, (etc.), choral pieces, and other vocal works set to this text), listed by composer (not necessarily exhaustive):
- by Barrett Leonard, Lady , as Mrs. Barrett Lennard, "Thou canst not restore me", published <<1850 [ voice and piano ], London : Cramer, Addison & Beale's; note: the song begins with stanza 9 [sung text not yet checked]
Researcher for this text: Emily Ezust [Administrator]
This text was added to the website: 2024-02-21
Line count: 48
Word count: 443