Masquerade
Man plays the masker even against his will:
What most he feels he is condemned to hide
Or wholly smother, lest his race deride:
Wears he an open heart—it will grow chill,
And every blast will bid its pulse be still;
Not long his naked bosom can abide
The freezing breath of cold unfeeling pride:
Who can, thus doomed, his destiny fulfill?
In vain the yearning heart shall fondly stretch
Its tendrils forth,—the frost will wither them;
While its possessor, a deluded wretch,
From loving, turns most bitterly to condemn;
Learning, too late, the power of self-reliance—
That who would live the truth, must bid the world defiance.
- Title
- Masquerade
- Alternative Title
- Man plays the masker even against his will
- Creator
-
George Shepard Burleigh
- Bibliographic Citation
- Small Scrapbook 70
- For the Voice of Freedom
- Date
- 1842
- note
- This poem explicitly affirms "self-reliance"
- Part of a set of three sonnets published in The Voice of Freedom, alongside The Cottage and The Coward.
- Coward, The
-
Cottage, The
- Under E.D.H. pseudonym
- "Pleasant Hight" (sic)
- Precise date of the last poem in the sequence (The Cottage) given as 12/1/1842
- This poem is distinct from a later poem under the same name, Masquerade
-
Masquerade, The
- Media
-
Masquerade
