Cottage Poems by Patrick Brontë
page 53 of 68 (77%)
page 53 of 68 (77%)
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I see you in the sunbeam dance:
Attracted by the silken glance In that dread loom; Or blindly led, by fatal chance, To meet your doom. Ah! think not, 'tis the velvet flue Of hare, or rabbit, tempts your view; Or silken threads of dazzling hue, To ease your wing, The foaming savage, couched for you, Is on the spring. Entangled! freed!--and yet again You touch! 'tis o'er--that plaintive strain, That mournful buzz, that struggle vain, Proclaim your doom: Up to the murderous den you're ta'en, Your bloody tomb! So thoughtless youths will trifling play With dangers on their giddy way, Or madly err in open day Through passions fell, And fall, though warned oft, a prey To death and hell! But hark! the fluttering leafy trees Proclaim the gently swelling breeze, Whilst through my window, by degrees, |
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