11.
And wisely therefore night prefer,
Whose dusky mantle veils their
fears,
Of this, and that,
of eyes and ears,
Affording shades to those that err.
12.
Now, by my foul, ’tis most delight
To view each other panting,
dying.
In love’s extatic
posture lying,
Grateful to feeling, as to sight.
13.
And had the glaring God of Day,
(As formerly of Mars and Venus)
Divulg’d the joys which
pass’d between us,
Regardless of his peeping ray.
14.
Of love admiring such a sample,
The Gods and Goddesses descending,
Had never fancied us offending,
But wisely followed our example.
* * * * *
When to their airy hall, my father’s voice, Shall call my spirit, joyful in their choice, When pois’d upon the gale, my form shall ride, Or dark in mist, descend the mountain’s side; Oh! may my shade behold no sculptur’d urns, To mark the spot, where earth to earth returns. No lengthen’d scroll of virtue, and renown, My epitaph, shall be my name alone; If that with honour fails to crown my clay, Oh! may no other fame my deeds repay; That, only that, shall single out the shot, By that remember’d, or fore’er forgot.—
1803.
* * * * *
TO ——
1.
Oh! when shall the grave hide forever
my sorrow?
Oh! when shall my soul wing
her flight from this clay?
The present is hell! and the coming to-morrow,
But brings with new torture,
the curse of to-day.
2.
From my eye flows no tear, from my lips
fall no curses,
I blast not the fiends, who
have hurl’d me from bliss,
For poor is the soul which bewailing rehearses,
Its querulous grief, when
in anguish like this—
3.
Was my eye, ’stead of tears, with
red fury flakes bright’ning.
Would my lips breathe a flame,
which no stream could assuage,
On our foes should my glance launch in
vengeance its lightning,
With transport my tongue give
a loose to its rage.
4.
But now tears and curses alike unavailing,
Would add to the souls of
our tyrants delight;
Could they view us, our sad separation
bewailing,
Their merciless hearts would
rejoice at the sight.
5.
Yet still though we bend with a feign’d
resignation,
Life beams not for us with
one ray that can cheer,
Love and hope upon earth bring no more
consolation,
In the grave is our hope,
for in life is our fear.
6.
Oh! when, my ador’d, in the tomb
will they place me,
Since in life, love and friendship,
for ever are fled,
If again in the mansion of death I embrace
thee,
Perhaps they will leave unmolested—the
dead.