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115

A DAY DREAM.

We'll have a cot
Upon the banks of some wandering stream,
Whose ripple, like the murmur of a dream,
Shall be our music; roses there shall twine
Around the casement, with the jessamine,
Whose starry blossoms shine out from beneath
Their veiling leaves like hope, and whose faint breath
Is sweet as memory's perfume. All the flowers
That Nature in her richest beauty showers,
Shall deck our home; fresh violets that, like light
And love and hope, dwell everywhere; the bright
And fragrant honeysuckle, too; our feet
Shall press the daisy's bloom. O! 'twill be sweet
To sit within the porch at even-tide,
And drink the breath of heaven at thy dear side.
The sky will wear a smile unseen before,
The sun for me more genial light will pour,
Earth will give out its treasures rich and rare,
New health will come in every balmy air.
Then thou wilt ope to me great Nature's book,
And nightly on the star-gemmed heavens we'll look;
Thou, with the pride of knowledge, wilt unfold
The mighty chart where science is enrolled,
And gayly smile when I recount to thee
My wild and wayward flights of fantasy;
For the frail beings of my dreamy heaven
Shrink from the light by scholiast wisdom given.

116

Wilt thou not joy to see the vivid glow
Of my expanded mind, when I shall owe
Its treasures all to thee?
Methinks it would be grief for me to bear
E'en bliss, beloved, unless thou, too, might share;
But O! were joy poured forth in such excess,
My heart would break from very happiness.