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Arthur Hugh Clough (1819-1861)

    THAT out of sight is out of mind
    Is true of most we leave behind;
    It is not, sure, nor can be true,
    My own and dearest love, of you.

    They were my friends, 'twas sad to part;
    Almost a tear began to start;
    But yet as things run on they find
    That out of sight is out of mind.

    For men that will not idlers be
    Must lend their hearts to things they see;
    And friends who leave them far behind,
    Being out of sight are out of mind.

    I do not blame; I think that when
    The cold and silent see again,
    Kind hearts will yet as erst be kind,
    'Twas out of sight was out of mind.

    I knew it, when we parted, well,
    I knew it, but was loth to tell;
    I knew before, what now I find,
    That out of sight was out of mind.

    That friends, however friends they were,
    Still deal with things as things occur,
    And that, excepting for the blind,
    What's out of sight is out of mind.

    But love is, as they tell us, blind;
    So out of sight and out of mind
    Need not, nor will, I think, be true,
    My own and dearest love, of you.

 


The above poem can be found in:
  • Clough, Arthur Hugh. The Poems of Arthur Hugh Clough, second edition. F.L. Mulhauser, ed. London: Oxford University Press, 1974.