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Thy generous worth hath from thy friend received! Thy friend! O savage heart and cruel hand! Fell, hateful, faithless, cowardly, and base! Of every baleful thing, by heaven cast off, Most cursed and miserable!— O that ere this the dust had cover'd me Like a crush'd snake, whose sting is yet unsheath'd! Would in the bloody trench some sabred Moor Had lanced this hold of life—this latent seat Of cruelty! or rather that some dart, Shot erring in our days of boyish sport, Had pierced its core! Then by my early grave He had shed over me a brother's tears; He had sat there and wept and mourn'd for me, When from all human thoughts but his alone All thoughts of me had been extinguish'd. Juen! My Juen, dear, dear friend! Juen de Torva! Thy name is on my lips, as it was wont; Thine image in my heart like stirring life; Thy form upon my fancy like that form Which bless'd my happy days. How he would look, When with his outspread arms, as he returned After some absence!—Oh, it tortures me! Let any image cross my mind but this! No, no! not this!—Sable, sepulchral gloom! Embody to my sight some terrible thing, And I will brave it (pausing and looking round).