The improvisatrice; and other poems By L. E. L. [i.e. Landon] With embellishments. A new edition |
APOLOGUE:
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The improvisatrice; and other poems | ||
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APOLOGUE:
THE THOUGHT SUGGESTED BY A SPANISH SAYING, “AIR—FIRE—WATER—SHAME.”
WATER.
Seek for me in the Arab maid's bower,Where the fountain plays over the jasmine flower;
Seek for me in the light cascade
The minstrel lists in the greenwood shade;
Seek me at morn 'mid the violet's dyes:
Seek me where rainbows paint April skies:
In the blue rush of rivers, the depths of the sea,
If we should sever, there seek for me.
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FIRE.
Seek for me where the war-shots meet,Where the soldier's cloak is his winding-sheet;
Seek for me where the lava wave
Bursts from Etna's secret cave;
Seek for me where Christmas mirth
Brightens the circle of love round your hearth;
Where meteor-flames glance, where the stars are bright;
Where the beacon flashes at the dead midnight;
Where the lightning scathes the tall oak-tree,
If we should sever, there seek for me.
AIR.
Seek for me where the Spanish maidHearkens at eve to the serenade:
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Where the billows foam round the sinking bark;
Where the aspen-leaf floats on the summer's gale,
Where the rose bends low at the nightingale's tale:
Where the wind-harp wakens in melody,
If we should sever, there seek for me.
SHAME.
Seek not me, if we should sever:Parted once, we part for ever.
The improvisatrice; and other poems | ||