“If thou wert by my side, my love”

by Reginald Heber English

Lines Written to His Wife, While on a Visit to Upper India IF thou wert by my side, my love!   How fast would evening fail In green Bengala’s palmy grove,   Listening the nightingale! If thou, my love, wert by my side,   My babies at my knee, How gayly would our pinnace glide   O’er Gunga’s mimic sea! I miss thee at the dawning gray,   When, on our deck reclined, In careless ease my limbs I lay   And woo the cooler wind. I miss thee when by Gunga’s stream   My twilight steps I guide, But most beneath the lamp’s pale beam   I miss thee from my side. I spread my books, my pencil try,   The lingering noon to cheer, But miss thy kind, approving eye,   Thy meek, attentive ear. But when at morn and eve the star   Beholds me on my knee, I feel, though thou art distant far,   Thy prayers ascend for me. Then on! then on! where duty leads,   My course be onward still, O’er broad Hindostan’s sultry meads,   O’er bleak Almorah’s hill. That course nor Delhi’s kingly gates,   Nor mild Malwah detain; For sweet the bliss us both awaits   By yonder western main. Thy towers, Bombay, gleam bright, they say,   Across the dark blue sea; But never were hearts so light and gay   As then shall meet in thee!

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