My First Folly

STANZAS WRITTEN AT MIDNIGHT

Pretty Coquette, the ceaseless play
—Of thine unstudied wit,
And thy dark eye's remembered ray
—By buoyant fancy lit,
And thy young forehead's clear expanse,
Where the locks slept, as through the dance,
—Dreamlike, I saw thee flit,
Are far too warm and far too fair
To mix with aught of earthly care;
But the vision shall come when my day is done,
A frail and a fair and a fleeting one!

And if the many boldly gaze
—On that bright brow of thine,
And if thine eye's undying rays
—On countless coxcombs shine,
And if thy wit flings out its mirth,
Which echoes more of air than earth,
—For other ears than mine,
I heed not this; ye are fickle things,
And I like your very wanderings;
I gaze, and if thousands share the bliss,
Pretty capricious! I heed not this.

In sooth I am a wayward youth,
—As fickle as the sea,
And very apt to speak the truth,
—Unpleasing though it be;
I am no lover; yet as long
As I have heart for jest or song,
—An image, Sweet, of thee,
Locked in my heart's remotest treasures,
Shall ever be one of its hoarded pleasures;—
This from the scoffer thou hast won,
And more than this he gives to none.
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