Spring. To Miss

TO MISS — — —

Other poets may muse on thy beauties, and sing
Of thy birds, and thy flowers, and thy perfumes, sweet Spring!
They may wander enraptur'd by hills and by mountains,
Or pensively pore by thy fresh gushing fountains;
Or sleep in the moonlight by favourite streams,
Inspir'd by the whispering sylphs in their dreams,
And awake from their slumbers to hail the bright sun,
When shining in dew the fresh morning comes on.

But I've wet shoes and stockings, a cold in my throat,
The head-ache, and tooth-ache, and quinsy to boot;
No dew from the cups of the flow'rets I sip, —
'Tis nothing but boneset that moistens my lip;
Not a cress from the spring or the brook can be had:
At morn, noon, and night, I get nothing but shad;
My whispering sylph is a broad-shoulder'd lass,
And my bright sun — a warming pan made out of brass!

Then be thou my genius; for what can I do,
When I cannot see nature , but copy from you?
If Spring be the season of beauty and youth,
Of health and of loveliness, kindness and truth;
Of all that's inspiring, and all that is bright,
And all that is what we call just about right —
Why need I expose my sick muse to the weather,
When by going to you she would find all together?
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