Poems (1828) by Thomas Gent
page 46 of 136 (33%)
page 46 of 136 (33%)
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The first-blown blossoms of the spring;
My tearful cheek you wipe in vain, And bid its pale rose bloom again. In vain! unconscious, did I say? Oh! you alone these tears can stay; Alone, the pale rose can renew, Whose sunshine is a smile from you. Yet not in friendship's smile it lives; Too cold the gifts that friendship gives: The beam that warms a winter's day, Plays coldly in the lap of May. You bid my sad heart cease to swell, But will you, if its tale I tell, Nor turn away, nor frown the while, But smile, as you were wont to smile? Then bring me not the blossoms young, That erst on Flora's forehead hung; But round thy radiant temples twine, The flowers whose flaunting mocks at mine. Give me--nor pinks, nor pansies gay, Nor violets, fading fast away, Nor myrtle, rue, nor rosemary, But give, oh! give, thyself to me! |
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