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The poems of Owen Meredith (Honble Robert Lytton.)

Selected and revised by the author. Copyright edition. In two volumes

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LOVE FANCIES.
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
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40

LOVE FANCIES.

I. (Morning.)

Since we parted yester eve,
I do love thee, love, believe,
Twelve times dearer, twelve hours longer,
One dream deeper, one night stronger,
One sun surer,—thus much more
Than I loved thee, love, before.

II. (Noon.)

Is it you . . . . . or a garden of flowers,
Blooming, blooming, breathing, breathing,
Budding, budding; whence sweet Hours
Their delighted brows are wreathing?
Is it I . . . . . or a nest of song-birds,
Chirping, chirping all together?
To the old birds pipe the young birds,
‘Fly, fly! it is summer weather!’

III. (Afternoon.)

O leave me, love, that quiet hand,
Safe nestled in my folded palm,
Till all my soul doth understand
That Love's most perfect crown is Calm!

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I think that, by and by, all things
Which were perplext a while ago,
And life's long vain conjecturings,
Will peaceful, plain, and simple grow.
Already, round about me, some
August and solemn gladness seems
Reposing in a dewy dome
Of twilight, o'er a land of dreams
Silent, and soft, and infinite.
The hush of old warm woods that lie
Low in the lap of evening, bright
And bathed in vast tranquility!