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Woman, A Poem

By Eaton Stannard Barrett ... Occasional Poems
  

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OCCASIONAL POEMS.
  
  
  
  
  


105

OCCASIONAL POEMS.


107

SONG.

[Haste, my love, and come away]

Haste, my love, and come away;
What is folly? what is sorrow?
Tis to turn from joy today,
Tis to wait for care tomorrow.

108

By yon river,
Aspens shiver;
Thus I tremble at delay.
Light discovers
Simple lovers;
See the stars, with sharpened ray,
Flocking thicker,
Glancing quicker;
Haste, my love, and come away.

109

FANNY.

Say, Fanny, why has equal heaven,
In every bounty good and wise,
Perfection to your features given,
Enchantment to your witching eyes?
Was it that mortal man might view,
These charms at distance, and adore?
Ah, no! the man who would not woo,
Were less than mortal, or were more.

110

The mossy rose, by humming bee,
And painted butterfly carest,
We leave not fading on the tree,
But snatch it to the happy breast.
There unsurpast in sweets it dwells—
Unless the bosom be your own;
There blooming, every bloom excels—
Except your tender blush alone.
O Fanny, life is on the wing,
And years, like rivers, glide away;
Tomorrow may misfortune bring,
Then, lovely girl, enjoy today.

111

Nor thus, before the kiss I sip,
Start bashful from these ardent arms;
As if afraid my printing lip,
Might rob your printed lip of charms.
For feet impair not, tho' they tread,
The blooming primrose.—Fanny smiled.
Come then, the meadow flowers, she said,
Come, press the primrose blooming wild.

112

SONNET, TO THE MOON.

Now while the birds within their feathers hide
The nestled head, thy visit, Moon, renew;
Let thy pale spirit thro' the foliage glide,
And flowering thorns illuminate with dew.
To thee the Nightingale her pipe shall play,
And thus my pen shall moralize her lay.

113

The gorgeous Sun ten thousand warblers sing,
One solitary bird the Moon below.
Thus for the Great what choral Pæans ring!
Thus for the Meek what scanty praises flow!

114

SONNET. THE BUTTERFLY.

Where flowerets hung reflected o'er the brook,
A harmless Butterfly my path beset;
Itself a flying flower, and pinions shook,
Of starry gold, and azure edged with jet.

115

Abrupt I caught it, and a pinion tore.
The mangled thing into a lily fell;
Nor all my nurture could its soul restore,
Nor all the dewy odours of the bell.
It died within the flower it loved so well.
Thus nymphs, untreasured of fair virtue, lie
Forlorn amid their native vales, and die.

116

THE FAREWELL.

Go, tender Muse, tis near the gloomy day
Of parting; go, and bid farewell for me;
Farewell to her who once endured thy lay,
Since hence she hastens far—Ah, hard decree!
Tell her I feel, at that portentous hour,
Not waves alone will heave in tumult high;
Not skies alone will rain a gushing shower,
Not winds alone will breathe a plaintive sigh.

117

Say, that her influence flies not with her form,
That distant, she will still engage my mind
That suns are most remote when most they warm,
That flying Parthians scatter darts behind.
Long will I gaze upon her vacant home,
As the bird lingers near its pilfered nest;
Still murmur, There she read the studious tome,
There sported, there her happy pet caressed.
There, as she sat at each accomplished art,
I saw her form inclined with Sapphic grace
Her looks, her movements, simple from the heart,
And all the unbought treasures of her face.

118

That open forehead parting clustered hair,
That cheek of peachy tinct, that slender brow;
The witching archness, and the pensive air,
So magical, they charmed I knew not how.
Light were her footsteps, as the silent flakes
Of falling snow; her smiles, elate as morn;
Her dimple, like the print a berry makes,
In glassy brook, when dropping from the thorn.
To catch her accents, as afar she spoke,
To see her distant hand (that future prize!)
Fling back a ringlet, oft I dared provoke
The gentle vengeance of averted eyes.

119

Yet ah, what wonder, if, when conscious awe
Withheld me from approach, I broke my chain?
Or, when I made a single glance my law,
What wonder if that law were made in vain?
And can no charm but sweet discourse enthrall?
Tho' ne'er for me those speaking features moved;
The valley, silent save where echoes call,
When long beheld, eternally is loved.
That spot, the shelter of our early years,
That spot, where shrouded friends and kindred lie;
Still for that spot we shed remembering tears,
Still to that absent spot return and die.

120

Go then, my Muse, before the parting day,
Long dreaded; go, and bid farewell for me;
Farewell to her who once endured thy lay,
Whate'er engage her, whereso'er she be.
If slumbering, tell her in my dreams she sways,
If speaking, tell her in my words she glows;
If thoughtful, tell her in my thoughts she strays,
If tuneful, tell her in my song she flows.
Confess that soon my dreams will wander wild,
That soon my words will intermingle moans;
That soon my thoughts will languish unbeguiled,
That soon my song will wake lamenting tones.

121

Then, in romantic moments, I will frame
Some scene ideal, when we meet at last;
Where, rescued by myself from surge or flame,
She smiles reward and talks of all the past.
Now to the rural lark she hastes away.
Ah! could the bard some winged warbler be;
Following her form, no longer would he say,
Go, tender Muse, and bid farewell for me.