Poetical remains (1872) | ||
58
The Smile.
Beauteous Roses, not with morn
From the thorn
Scattering sweet but transient pleasures;
You, whom round the lips display'd,
Love has made
Guardians of his pearly treasures!
From the thorn
Scattering sweet but transient pleasures;
You, whom round the lips display'd,
Love has made
Guardians of his pearly treasures!
Dear to Love, sweet Roses! tell,
If I dwell,
Fondly those bright eyes beholding;
As I gaze, and gazing sigh,
Tell me why
You expand in smiles unfolding?
If I dwell,
Fondly those bright eyes beholding;
As I gaze, and gazing sigh,
Tell me why
You expand in smiles unfolding?
Conscious, I could ill sustain
Your disdain,
Seek you thus my life to cherish?
Is it that you feel delight
In the sight
Of the pangs by which I perish?
Your disdain,
Seek you thus my life to cherish?
Is it that you feel delight
In the sight
Of the pangs by which I perish?
60
Beauteous Roses, be your joy
To destroy
Or to save, since thus you show it;
Still will I in novel lays
Sing your praise,
But oh! smile upon your Poet.
To destroy
Or to save, since thus you show it;
Still will I in novel lays
Sing your praise,
But oh! smile upon your Poet.
If at dayspring, as we pass
Through the grass,
Murmur rills and whisper breezes;
If, with flowers the mead looks gay,
Sooth'd we say,
How the smiling landscape pleases!
Through the grass,
Murmur rills and whisper breezes;
If, with flowers the mead looks gay,
Sooth'd we say,
How the smiling landscape pleases!
When his foot blithe zephyr laves
In the waves,
That with gently-gliding motion
Hardly rippling on the sand,
Kiss the strand;
See, we cry, how smiles the ocean!
In the waves,
That with gently-gliding motion
Hardly rippling on the sand,
Kiss the strand;
See, we cry, how smiles the ocean!
Veil'd in gold and round her hair
Lilies there,
Here each blushing blossom piling,
If, on wheels of sapphire drawn,
Mounts the dawn;
Lo! we say, the sky how smiling!
Lilies there,
Here each blushing blossom piling,
If, on wheels of sapphire drawn,
62
Lo! we say, the sky how smiling!
True, in mighty Nature's mirth,
Heaven and earth
Deck with smiles their jocund faces;
True, they smile; but, smiling so,
Cannot show
Half your soul-enchanting graces!
Heaven and earth
Deck with smiles their jocund faces;
True, they smile; but, smiling so,
Cannot show
Half your soul-enchanting graces!
Poetical remains (1872) | ||