University of Virginia Library


65

THE BEE.

TO MRS. ---
[_]

The Bee is chidden, for that in his providence of the merely useful things of life, he hath neglected the pleasures thereof and its sweeter enjoyments. Whilst his brothers of the hive are abroad in the fields, engaged in the dearer office of collecting the treasures o' flowers, he, the Solitary, remaineth locked within his cell, employed in the toilsome and ungrateful duty of extruction. He is advised to quit that dull life, nor be so wholly studious as to neglect pleasure. Inducements are mentioned, and at the name of his favourite flower, the pale Sweet-pea, his bosom riseth, and he goeth forth singing and very loving. But he is rebuked in that this flower is in possession of another, and exhorted rather to return to his former obscurity, than follow such unholy loves.

From th' intricate, though gainful,
Thy wax-wrought knavery,
From sweetless and from painful,
Come forth, thou drowsy Bee.
Long season thou'st been rearing
Thy scientific bowers,
And o'er the future peering,
Forgat the present flowers.

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Come, rouse thee from thy slumbers,
And shake thy trumpet-wing,
In small, sonorous numbers,
Thou tiny poet sing.
O'er od'rous bells and blossoms
See others how they hie,
And pillow'd by sweet bosoms,
They murmur as they lie.
The coronet fresh o' the fountain,
The lily i' the vale,
Queen daisy on her mountain,
And primrose prink-the-dale;
The time's-scythe mocking myrtle,
The rose in blushes drest,
Like virgin without kirtle,
Laid in her lover's breast;

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Sweet-pea 'n pale pink—Thou minion!
Ay, now thy breast's on fire,
Thou spread'st thy flimsy pinion,
And wak'st thy meadow lyre.
Thou fool! will nought content thee
Less than such flow'r divine?
Repent ye, ah! repent ye,
Whilst yet the pow'r is thine.
What though aspirant Zephyrs,
On most Hyblæan wing,
With rival breaths, sweet favours
Into her bosom bring;
Her beauteous head reclining
Upon majestic stem,
Ambitious pale, entwining
Her floral diadem;

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Though odours amaranthine,
Rapt from empyreal bow'rs,
Her slender limbs might grant thine,
The queen o' graceful flow'rs!
Yet see! churl coyness gathers,
Back! to thy cell again!
Her bosom is another's,
Thy song is all in vain.