The Home Book of Verse — Volume 4 by Burton Egbert Stevenson
page 7 of 353 (01%)
page 7 of 353 (01%)
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Have long set the Loves at defiance,
Now, done with the science of blisses, May fly to the blisses of science! Young Sappho, for want of employments, Alone o'er her Ovid may melt, Condemned but to read of enjoyments, Which wiser Corinna had felt. But for you to be buried in books - Oh, Fanny! they're pitiful sages; Who could not in one of your looks Read more than in millions of pages! Astronomy finds in your eyes Better light than she studies above, And Music must borrow your sighs As the melody fittest for Love. In Ethics - 'tis you that can check, In a minute, their doubts and their quarrels; Oh! show but that mole on your neck, And 'twill soon put an end to their morals. Your Arithmetic only can trip When to kiss and to count you endeavor; But eloquence glows on your lip When you swear that you'll love me for ever. Thus you see what a brilliant alliance |
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