Occasional verse, moral and sacred Published for the instruction and amusement of the Candidly Serious and Religious [by Edward Perronet] |
THE ROSE.
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Occasional verse, moral and sacred | ||
166
THE ROSE.
AN EMBLEM.
I
Hail! thou lovely, favourite flower!Idol of the fragrant bower;
Full of pleasure, full of sweets,
Whom the blushing virgin greets.
II
Emblem, in thy reseate tintsOf unsully'd innocence;
Sweet adorner of the grove,
Type of purity and love.
III
Blooming flower, whose buds unblownHarbour extasies unknown;
But whose opening foliage bright
Chears the smell, and glads the sight.
IV
Yet, with all thy pleasing charms;Oft thy briar'd leaf alarms;
Piercing with its thorny blade
Who its treasures would invade;
167
V
Teaching ignorance to beware,And the rash to touch with care:
Emblem of the world and time,
In their ruin and their prime:
VI
Budding, blooming, day by day,Till arrives their last decay;
Till a nobler period come,
And the Rose of Sharon bloom!
Occasional verse, moral and sacred | ||