If lovely flowers or fruit he sees,

Which women love, upon the trees,

To thee, to thee his fancy flies.

And ‘Sítá! O my love!’ he cries.”

Canto XXXVII. Sítá's Speech.

“Thou bringest me,” she cried again,

“A mingled draught of bliss and pain:

Bliss, that he wears me in his heart,

Pain, that he wakes and weeps apart,