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Malvern Hills

with Minor Poems, and Essays. By Joseph Cottle. Fourth Edition

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THE WINTER ROBIN.
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
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THE WINTER ROBIN.

SWEET Robin! I hail thy appearance once more,
Come sing in my garden, or peck at my door;
Though an ingrate for favours so often conferr'd,
I still view with pleasure my favourite bird.

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When the last winter's tempest rushed down from the sky,
Thou appear'dst at my window with pitiful eye!
The bread from my table unsparing I cast,
And thought that one friend might be faithful at last.
Thy contemplative look, 'twas my joy to behold,
Thy flight, long repressed, and thy plumage of gold;
And the oftener thou cam'st from thy dwelling unknown,
The more welcome thou wast to the crumbs I had thrown.
The mild breath of spring, from their covert profound,
Call'd the leaves into light, and bespangled the ground,
Ah! then, mid the blaze of prosperity's reign,
I sought for my Robin, but sought him in vain!
Now that summer is pass'd, and the forest is bare,
At my window thou stand'st, a sad spectacle there;
Cold and shivering my pardon thou seem'st to implore,
And to ask for the hand that once fed thee before.
Come, banish thy grief, nor past folly bewail,
My love is a store-house that never shall fail;
At evening, at morning, at noon, and at night,
To feed my sweet bird shall still give me delight.
Ah! why should I thus thine inconstancy chide?
Have I no conviction of crimes deeper dyed?
Though of reason possess'd and instruction divine,
My spirit is far more ungrateful than thine!
From the moment since first I this vital air drew,
One friend has preserved and supported me too;
Yet how often have I, while I sumptuously fared,
Forgotten the hand that my banquet prepared!