When hearts are trumps by Thomas Winthrop Hall
page 9 of 79 (11%)
page 9 of 79 (11%)
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Prepare your patience, furbish up your art.
How now? Did I not see you then recoil? Tell me how many times it has known pain; Tell me what thing will make it feel delight; Tell me when it is modest, when 'tis vain; Tell me when it is wrong and when 'tis right: But tell me this, all other things above,-- Can it feel, Sage, the thing that man calls "Love"? To Phyllis Reading a Letter. A smile is curving o'er her creamy cheek, Her bosom swells with all a lover's joy, When love receives a message that the coy Young love-god made a strong and true heart speak From far-off lands; and like a mountain-peak That loses in one avalanche its cloy Of ice and snow, so doth her breast employ Its hidden store of blushes; and they wreak Destruction, as they crush my aching heart,-- Destruction, wild, relentless, and as sure As the poor Alpine hamlet's; and no art Can hide my agony, no herb can cure My wound. Her very blush says, "We must part." Why was it always my fate to endure? |
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