Poems by Denis Florence MacCarthy
page 59 of 379 (15%)
page 59 of 379 (15%)
|
At evening, when the starlight broke,
It bending sought the dewy sod; And thus at morn, and thus at even, In fragrant sighs its heart revealed, Thus seeking heaven, and making heaven Within its own sweet summer field! Oh! joy beyond all human joy! Oh! bliss beyond all earthly bliss! If pitying Fate will not destroy My hopes of such a flower as this! How happy, fond, and heaven-possest, My heart will be to tend and shield, And guard upon my grateful breast The pride of that sweet summer field! FATAL GIFTS. The poet's heart is a fatal boon, And fatal his wondrous eye, And the delicate ear, So quick to hear, Over the earth and sky, Creation's mystic tune! Soon, soon, but not too soon, Does that ear grow deaf and that eye grow dim, And nature becometh a waste for him, Whom, born for another sphere, |
|