The Poems of Henry Timrod by Henry Timrod
page 83 of 215 (38%)
page 83 of 215 (38%)
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Where, as amid a field of flowers, You have but played with April showers. Ah! we would wish the world less fair, If Spring alone adorned the year, And Autumn came not with its fruit, And Autumn hymns were ever mute. So I remark without surprise That, as the unvarying season flies, From day to night and night to day, You sicken of your endless May. In this poor life we may not cross One virtuous instinct without loss, And the soul grows not to its height Till love calls forth its utmost might. Not blind to all you might have been, And with some consciousness of sin -- Because with love you sometimes played, And choice, not fate, hath kept you maid -- You feel that you must pass from earth But half-acquainted with its worth, |
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