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Thursday, October 1, 2015

MARY ELIZABETH COLERIDGE 1861-1907


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AN INSINCERE WISH ADDRESSED TO A BEGGAR

We are not near enough to love,
I can but pity all your woe;
For wealth has lifted me above,
And falsehood set you down below.

If you were true, we still might be
Brothers in something more than name;
And were I poor, your love to me
Would make our differing bonds the same.

But golden gates between us stretch,
Truth opens her forbidding eyes;
You can't forget that I am rich,
Nor I that you are telling lies.

Love never comes but at love's call,
And pity asks for him in vain;
Because I cannot give you all,
You give me nothing back again.

And you are right with all your wrong,
For less than all is nothing too;
May Heaven beggar me ere long,
And Truth reveal herself to you! 

Mary Coleridge was a British novelist and poet who also wrote essays and reviews. She was a great-grand niece of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and a great niece of Sara Coleridge.

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