[Poems by Pinkney in] The life and works of Edward Coote Pinkney a memoir and complete text of his poems and literary prose, including much never before published |
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[Poems by Pinkney in] The life and works of Edward Coote Pinkney | ||
187
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Written for a lady, to be given with a ring, fashioned as a serpent;—the motto being,—“Let memory be the Slave of the Ring.”
Before we part, this mimic snake
I charm, and send to thee,
That it may keep from Time's attack
Thy memory of me.
I charm, and send to thee,
That it may keep from Time's attack
Thy memory of me.
Thus, amid Eastern India's lands,
As travellers have told,
The Rajah from all hostile hands
Protects his buried gold.
As travellers have told,
The Rajah from all hostile hands
Protects his buried gold.
[Poems by Pinkney in] The life and works of Edward Coote Pinkney | ||