![]() | The Second Part of Original Poems | ![]() |
44
The Expostulation.
I
Why should I pine, lament, and die,For one kind Glance of Flora's Eye;
Or sue to her who slights my Pains,
Contemns my Vows, my Love disdains?
While such a beauteous Throng appear,
More kind than she,—tho' none so fair.
II
More soft she seems than falling Snow;Or silver Streams that gently flow,
When those bewitching Eyes I view,
They look as they could pity too;
But when to her I make my Moan,
She's harder than the hardest Stone,
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III
No longer will I waste my Time,And spend in vain my youthful Prime,
To court a Maid, whose chiefest Joy
Is how to torture and destroy:
I won't be any longer blind,
For none are charming but the kind.
IV
But, stay:—Behold the blooming Fair!Her graceful Shape! her lovely Air!
All my Resolves are flown away,
Like Ghosts at the approaching Day;
And as the Sun the Flow'r revives,
My Passion in her Presence thrives.
V
'Tis vain elsewhere to seek Redress,For She, and only She, can bless:
Ev'n while I to forget her try,
For her, and her alone, I die:
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Her Breast to cure the Lover's Woes!
![]() | The Second Part of Original Poems | ![]() |