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Sixty-Five Sonnets

With Prefatory Remarks on the Accordance of the Sonnet with the Powers of the English Language: Also, A Few Miscellaneous Poems [by Thomas Doubleday]

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76

L.

Oh! he is bless'd, and ten times bless'd, what though
Steep'd to the very lips, and full of grief,
Who, quite forsaken, free to seek relief,
Amid the shades of solitude may go,
And temper disappointment's bitter throe
By memorizing every fitful scene,
Where all his ills and all his joys have been;
Till pleasure strangely takes the place of woe,
Compared with him, who, fasten'd to a stake,
Asks solitude in vain his grief to 'guile,
Who, though his lacerated heart must ache
Within his sore and shrinking breast the while,
By an unfeeling, selfish world's mistake
Is voted happy, and condemn'd to smile!