5 - Love Poetry
Summary
THE WIFE'S LAMENT
The song of myself is a sad, sad song.
Only I know of the troubles I've seen,
The suffering, the sorrow, the heartache, the hurt –
And always the keenest of all my cares
Is an exile's endurance, the hunger for home.
Since becoming a woman I've known such woe:
Early and late, present and past – but never
So much, no, never so much,
Never so much as now. Since the dawn
When my dear lord, across the wide waves,
Took his departure, far from his friends,
Each daybreak brings back to me all the same
Sorrow: where is my loved one?
Where's my lord gone?
When I first came here,
Alone and unwelcome, to live with my lover,
Hunting for happiness, forlorn of all friends,
Scheming in secret my kinsmen conspired
To cleave us asunder, my new-found family
Pulled us apart. They wanted the whole world
To widen between us, so we'd live in longing
With no hope in our hearts;
My man had commanded me
To keep to this country, to live in this land
Though my friends here were few.
That's the source of my sadness:
Though I'd found a fellow with the sweetest smile,
With a face of friendship, free of all care –
His heart hid harm. He'd murder in mind.
How vainly we vowed that nothing in life 30
Would put us asunder; we'd keep one another
Till death did us part! Now that's all in the past;
Our bond is broken, borne on the wind,
Tossed on the tideway, gone without trace.
And though he's so dear, that violent vendetta –
That death-dealing duel, the feud that he fights for –
Means misery for me. Now those cruel kinsmen
Confine me to dwell in a forest fastness,
Under an oak, in a dreary dug-out
Scraped from the soil. Ancient this earth-work:
As old as my tears. My hovel's hedged in
By high-rearing hills, fenced in by forests
Of tangling briars. Piercing as thorns
Is my heart's sharp pain; dim as the dales
Is my darkening mind.
It's here, down here, that I feel most fiercely
The pain of that parting from my loved lord.
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- Anglo-Saxon Verse , pp. 82 - 91Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2000