Of blessings, and ten thousand more,
If when He come
He find the heart from home,
Doubtless He will unload Himself some otherwhere, And pour abroad
His precious sweets,
On the fair soul whom first He meets.
O fair! O fortunate! O rich! O dear! O happy, and thrice happy she, Dear silver-breasted dove,
Whoe'er she be,
Whose early love
With winged vows
Makes haste to meet her morning Spouse,
And close with His immortal kisses!
Happy, indeed, who never misses
To improve that precious hour,
And every day
Seize her sweet prey,
All fresh and fragrant as He rises, Dropping, with a balmy shower, A delicious dew of spices.
O, let the blessful heart hold fast Her heavenly armful, she shall taste At once ten thousand paradises!
She shall have power
To rifle and deflower
The rich and roseal spring of those rare sweets, Which with a swelling bosom there she meets;
Boundless and infinite, bottomless treasures
Of pure inebriating pleasures; Happy proof she shall discover, What joy, what bliss,
How many heavens at once it is, To have a God become her lover!
TO THE MORNING
Satisfaction for Sleep
WHAT succour can I hope the Muse will send, Whose drowsiness hath wronged the Muse's friend? What hope, Aurora, to propitiate thee,
Unless the Muse sing my apology?
O! in that morning of my shame, when I
Lay folded up in sleep's captivity;
How at the sight didst thou draw back thine eyes,
Into thy modest veil! how didst thou rise Twice dyed in thine own blushes, and didst run To draw the curtains and awake the sun! Who, rousing his illustrious tresses, came, And seeing the loathed object, hid for shame His head in thy fair bosom, and still hides Me from his patronage; I pray, he chides; And, pointing to dull Morpheus, bids me take My own Apollo, try if I can make
His Lethe be my Helicon, and see
If Morpheus have a Muse to wait on me. Hence 'tis my humble fancy finds no wings, No nimble raptures, starts to heaven and brings Enthusiastic flames, such as can give
Marrow to my plump genius, make it live Dressed in the glorious madness of a muse, Whose feet can walk the milky-way, and choose
Her starry throne; whose holy heats can warm The grave, and hold up an exalted arm To lift me from my lazy urn, and climb Upon the stooped shoulders of old Time, And trace eternity. But all is dead, All these delicious hopes are buried In the deep wrinkles of his angry brow, Where mercy cannot find them; but, O thou Bright lady of the morn, pity doth lie So warm in thy soft breast, it cannot die; Have mercy, then, and when he next doth rise, O, meet the angry god, invade his eyes,
And stroke his radiant cheeks; one timely kiss Will kill his anger, and revive my bliss. So to the treasure of thy pearly dew
Thrice will I pay three tears, to show how true My grief is; so my wakeful lay shall knock At the oriental gates, and duly mock The early lark's shrill orisons to be
An anthem at the day's nativity.
And the same rosy-fingered hand of thine, That shuts night's dying eyes, shall open mine. But thou, faint god of sleep, forget that I
Was ever known to be thy votary.
No more my pillow shall thine altar be,
Nor will I offer any more to thee
Myself a melting sacrifice; I'm born
Again a fresh child of the buxom morn,
Heir of the sun's first beams; why threat'st thou so? Why dost thou shake thy leaden sceptre? Go,
Bestow thy poppy upon wakeful woe,
Sickness and sorrow, whose pale lids ne'er know Thy downy finger dwell upon their eyes; Shut in their tears, shut out their miseries.
LOVE, brave Virtue's younger brother, Erst hath made my heart a mother. She consults the anxious spheres, To calculate her young son's years; She asks if sad or saving powers Gave omen to his infant hours; She asks each star that then stood by If poor Love shall live or die.
Ah, my heart, is that the way?
Are these the beams that rule thy day? Thou know'st a face in whose each look Beauty lays ope Love's fortune-book, On whose fair revolutions wait The obsequious motions of Love's fate. Ah, my heart! her eyes and she Have taught thee new astrology. Howe'er Love's native hours were set, Whatever starry synod met, "Tis in the mercy of her eye, If poor Love shall live or die.
If those sharp rays, putting on Points of death, bid Love be gone; Though the heavens in council sat To crown an uncontrolled fate; Though their best aspects twined upon The kindest constellation,
Cast amorous glances on his birth, And whispered the confederate earth
To pave his paths with all the good That warms the bed of youth and blood:- Love has no plea against her eye; Beauty frowns, and Love must die.
But if her milder influence move, And gild the hopes of humble Love ;- Though heaven's inauspicious eye Lay black on Love's nativity;
Though every diamond in Jove's crown Fixed his forehead to a frown;- Her eye a strong appeal can give, Beauty smiles, and Love shall live.
O, if Love shall live, O where, But in her eye, or in her ear, In her breast, or in her breath, Shall I hide poor Love from death? For in the life aught else can give, Love shall die, although he live.
Or, if Love shall die, O where, But in her eye, or in her ear, In her breath, or in her breast, Shall I build his funeral nest? While Love shall thus entombed lie, Love shall live, although he die!
Entitled, The Temple of Sacred Poems,' sent to a
KNOW you, fair, on what you look?
Divinest love lies in this book,
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