An hour ago when the wind blew high
At my lady’s window a red
leaf beat.
Then dropped at her door, where, passing by,
She carelessly trod it under her
feet.
I have taken it out of the dust and dirt,
With a tender pity but half defined.
Ah! poor bruised leaf, with your stain and hurt,
‘A fellow-feeling doth make
us kind.’
On winds of passion my heart was blown,
Like an autumn leaf one hapless
day.
At my lady’s window with tap and moan
It burned and fluttered its life
away.
Bright with the blood of its wasting tide
It glowed in the sun of her laughing
eyes.
What cared she though a stray heart died
What to her were its sobs and sighs.
The winds of passion were spent at last,
And my heart like the leaf in her
pathway lay;
And under her slender foot as she passed,
My lady she trod it and went her
way.
So I picked the leaf from its dusty place,
With a tender pity too
well defined.
And I laid it here in this velvet case,
Ah! a fellow-feeling doth make us
kind.