Sympathy - Poem by Robert William Service

My Muse is simple,–yet it’s nice
To think you don’t need to think twice
On words I write.
I reckon I’ve a common touch
And if you say I cuss too much
I answer: ‘Quite!’

I envy not the poet’s lot;
He has something I haven’t got,
Alas, I know.
But I have something maybe he
Would envy just a mite in me,–
I’m rather low.

For I am cast of common clay,
And from a ditch I fought my way,
And that is why
The while the poet scans the skies,
My gaze is grimly gutterwise,
Earthy am I.

And yet I have a gift, perhaps
Denied to proud poetic chaps
Who scoff at me;
I know the hearts of humble folk;
I too have bowed beneath the yoke:
So let my verse for them evoke
Your sympathy.
(by Robert William Service)

Lines Written by the Side of a River - Sympathy Poem

FLOW soft RIVER, gently stray,
Still a silent waving tide
O’er thy glitt’ring carpet glide,
While I chaunt my ROUNDELAY,
As I gather from thy bank,
Shelter’d by the poplar dank,
King-cups, deck’d in golden pride,
Harebells sweet, and daisies pied;
While beneath the evening sky,
Soft the western breezes fly.
Gentle RIVER, should’st thou be
Touch’d with mournful sympathy,
When reflection tells my soul,
Winter’s icy breath shall quell
Thy sweet bosom’s graceful swell,
And thy dimpling course controul;
Should a crystal tear of mine,
Fall upon thy lucid breast,
Oh receive the trembling guest,
For ’tis PITY’S drop divine!

GENTLE ZEPHYR, softly play,
Shake thy dewy wings around,
Sprinkle odours o’er the ground,
While I chaunt my ROUNDELAY.
While the woodbine’s mingling shade,
Veils my pensive, drooping head;
Fan, oh fan, the busy gale,
That rudely wantons round my cheek,
Where the tear of suff’rance meek,
Glitters on the LILY pale:
Ah! no more the damask ROSE,
There in crimson lustre glows;
Thirsty fevers from my lip
Dare the ruddy drops to sip;
Deep within my burning heart,
Sorrow plants an icy dart;
From whose point the soft tears flow,
Melting in the vivid glow;
Gentle Zephyr, should’st thou be
Touch’d with tender sympathy;
When reflection calls to mind,
The bleak and desolating wind,
That soon thy silken wing shall tear,
And waft it on the freezing air;
Zephyr, should a tender sigh
To thy balmy bosom fly,
Oh! receive the flutt’ring thing,
Place it on thy filmy wing,
Bear it to its native sky,
For ’tis PITY’S softest sigh.

O’er the golden lids of day
Steals a veil of sober grey;
Now the flow’rets sink to rest,
On the moist earth’s glitt’ring breast;
Homeward now I’ll bend my way,
AND CHAUNT MY PLAINTIVE ROUNDELAY.
(by Mary Darby Robinson)

Sympathy - Poem by Emily Bronte

There should be no despair for you
While nightly stars are burning,
While evening pours its silent dew
And sunshine gilds the morning.
There should be no despair - though tears
May flow down like a river:
Are not the best beloved of years
Around your heart forever?

They weep - you weep - it must be so;
Winds sigh as you are sighing,
And Winter sheds his grief in snow
Where Autumn’s leaves are lying:
Yet these revive, and from their fate
Your fate cannot be parted,
Then journey on, if not elate,
Still, never broken-hearted!
(by Emily Bronte)