The Poems of Henry Timrod by Henry Timrod
page 75 of 215 (34%)
page 75 of 215 (34%)
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Glanced slightly at her sunny curls,
And laughed and leaped as reckless by As though no pretty face were nigh! But -- here the maiden grows demure -- Indeed she's not so VERY sure, That in a year, or haply twain, Who looked e'er failed to look again, And sooth to say, I little doubt (Some azure day, the truth will out!) That certain baits in certain eyes Caught many an unsuspecting prize; And somewhere underneath these eaves A budding flirt put forth its leaves! Has not the sky a deeper blue, Have not the trees a greener hue, And bend they not with lordlier grace And nobler shapes above the place Where on one cloudless winter morn My Katie to this life was born? Ah, folly! long hath fled the hour When love to sight gave keener power, And lovers looked for special boons In brighter flowers and larger moons. But wave the foliage as it may, And let the sky be ashen gray, Thus much at least a manly youth May hold -- and yet not blush -- as truth: If near that blessed spot of earth Which saw the cherished maiden's birth |
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