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The Angel's Visit

'Twas on a glorious summer eve, —
A lovely eve in June, —
Serenely from her home above
Looked down the gentle moon;
And lovingly she smiled on me,
And softly soothed the pain —
The aching, heavy pain that lay
Upon my heart and brain.

And gently 'mid the murmuring leaves,
Scarce by its light wings stirred,
Like spirit voices soft and clear,
The night wind's song was heard;
In strains of music sweet and low
It sang to me of peace;
It bade my weary, troubled soul
Her sad complainings cease.

Love's Relief

AW RETCH long tortur'd with Disdain,
That hourly pin'd, but pin'd in vain;
At length the God of Wine addrest,
The Refuge of Awounded Breast.

Vouchsafe, oh Pow'r, thy healing Aid,
Teach me to gain the cruel Maid;
Thy Juices take the Lover's Part,
Flush his wan Looks, and chear his Heart.

Thus to the Jolly God he cry'd;
And thus the Jolly God reply'd,
Give whining o'er, be brisk and gay,
And quaff this sneaking Form away.

With dauntless Mein approach the Fair;
The Way to Conquer is to Dare.

Melissias

Melissias denies she's in love
but her body screams
she has absorbed
a quiver of darts
her walk is fitful
and her breath fitful
while her eyes have gone into
smitten hollows
by your dam
the chapleted Kypris
you tiny Lusts
hot up this girl
till the strict thing cries

Love And Reason On The Device Of A Seal Reason Giving Wings To Love With The Legend "Se Vede, Vola"

Venus once bound on Cupid's eyes
A fillet stolen from Fancy's bow,
And sent him wandering from the skies
To seek his fortune here below.

With face of sun-shine soul of mirth
He roved through wood and mead and bower
Making a sweeter heaven on earth
Such was of Fancy's spell the power.

Sometimes he thought he chased through air
The loveliest butterflies — and laugh'd
While wounding many a bosom fair
To see them fluttering on his shaft.

Reason who found an infant boy
Blindfold, alone, and far astray

Prologue Intended for All for Love Reviv'd

Since faint is Praise, which living Merit draws,
And always posthumous is true Applause;
Deny not Worth, far from your Eyes remov'd,
Its late Reward to be rever'd and lov'd.
To Poetry devoted be this Night,
And kill not, with your paltry Cares, Delight;
See how great Dryden could your Sires surprize,
E're Funds were giv'n, or Stocks could fall or rise,
E're Avarice had banish'd Love and Truth,
And with its vile Contagion seiz'd ev'n Youth;
When Vice had yet no other Fools to show,
But the well-natured Cully and the Beau:

Love, Death, and Reputation

Reputation, Love, and Death,
(The last all bones, the first all breath,
The midst composed of restless fire)
From each other would retire;
Through the world resolved to stray,
Every one a several way;
Exercising, as they went,
Each such power as Fate had lent;
Which, if it united were,
Wretched mortals could not bear.
But, as parting friends do show
To what place they mean to go,
Correspondence to engage,
Nominate their utmost stage;
Death declare he would be found
Near the fatal trumpet's sound;
Or where pestilences reign,

Haste not to Joy

Haste not to joy: harbor the sweet suspense.
The sun surprises not the world with light
But dawns with ever-lessening reticence,
Nor is the starry curtain of the night
Let fall ungently. Yon full river flood
Paused often at some meditative pool.
The rose holds back its glory in the bud
And Nature's temple has its vestibule.

So let your wooing be: first, with such look
That Fate must wait till your one word be spoken;
Then choice; then tenderness; and then the token
Of clasping hands, caressing and carressed.

A Plea for Love in Friendship

“Il n'y a pas d'amitié sans un peu de tendresse”

Friendship there is in Love or Love were not
The bond that holds the rolling world in leash:
But may not Love in Friendship be as true
A consecration and as firm a troth?
Even in Love more blessed 'tis to give
Than to receive. The magnet draws the steel
That leaps to the embrace: does it complain
It cannot draw the magnet? Landor wrote:
“There is delight in singing though none hear
Beside the singer.” Ask the tenderest
If this be not as true of loving, or

Love's Emblems

Love's meetest emblems are the flowers,
The blushing flowers of Spring —
Then bring me, dear, to charm my hours
Sweet leaves and blossoms bring.

I ask not gems or costly toys —
Their brightest ray is cold;
And ours are simpler, purer joys
Than can be won by gold.

The gems endure, the roses fade,
Yet something in the heart
Still tells that Love is best portrayed
By Nature, not by Art.

The dews, that tremble on the leaf,
But make its tints appear
More beautiful than aught so brief,

O Made for Love

O MADE for Love but unto Duty lost,
How fares it on the stony road of years?
Are there no sleepless dawns, no midnight tears
To show the one thou art the one thou wast?
Dost thou ne'er linger where the pathways crossed,
(Each like a blade of Fate's relentless shears),
While the old wistfulness o'er-sweeps thy fears?
In no weak moment countest thou the cost?

The cost! the cost!—but not to thee alone;
For who can reckon loss of thoughts unshared,
Sunsets unseen, and songs but spoken of?
What is the fireside if it warm but one?