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Ode to Florida

Florida, fair Florida, land of my birth,
Queen of the continent, gem of the earth.
Land where the skies are blue as the sea,
Where the bright laughing waters are flowing and free.
Land of fair sunlight,
Land of soft starlight,
Land where the moon is queen of the night,
I love thee, I love thee with passionate love.

Thou liest wrapped in the ocean's arms,
Old Neptune feasts upon thy charms,
And runs to kiss thy coral shore,
As a lover speeds to his lady's bower.
Beautiful Florida!
Lovely Florida!
Most favored spot of a favored land.

Song

The wreath you wove, the wreath you wove,
Is fair—but oh, how fair,
If Pity's hand had stolen from Love
One leaf to mingle there!

If every rose with gold were tied,
Did gems for dewdrops fall,
One faded leaf where Love had sighed
Were sweetly worth them all.

The wreath you wove, the wreath you wove
Our emblem well may be;
Its bloom is yours, but hopeless Love
Must keep its tears for me.

My Love I can compare with nought on earth

My Love I can compare with nought on earth,
And all my fear is only lest she be,
Like all we prize too much, removed from me,
'Mong amaranths to bloom of heavenly birth.
The fields of Cam bear witness of her worth;
The pleasant Lea soft murmurs in her praise;
Fair Cheshunt still rejoiceth in her mirth;
And Thamis at her feet his treasure lays!
Italia bright would claim her for its own;
But Albion, the seat of all my bliss,
Divides with it the boast, and prouder is
Of this than the chief jewel of her crown.
Happy is he who may possess this flower,

Anacreon, Ode 46

'T IS hard from love to spare the heart,
'Tis pain to feel his wounding dart,
But greater still, the loss, the pain,
To love, alas! and love in vain.
Wit, wisdom, birth, and beauty fade,
The beams of dazling gold display'd,
Curs'd be the wretch, the first who sold
His birth-right liberty, for gold,
Gold, that can murd'ring hands employ,
And brothers, fathers, sons, destroy;
Gold unresisted rules the ball,
By gold whole hosts, whole nations fall,
Yet more my sighs with grief reveal,
That love the force of gold can feel.

Love—To A

As of old the wildered dove,
Wandering over waters dark,
Finding neither fount nor grove,
Sought shelter in her home, the ark,

So my little one, my love,
Turns my restless heart to thee,
Weary, wheresoe'er she rove
O'er the inhospitable sea.

Time hath linked us heart to heart
With links of mutual memory,
Of gentle power if aught would part
To bind us close until we die.

If the world arise to sever,
Steals a tiny spirit-hand,
Glides to reunite us ever,
From the holy silent land.

Find the birthplace of sweet Love;

The Voice Of Love

When shadows o'er the landscape creep,
And twinkling stars pale vigils keep;
When flower-cups all with dew-drops gleam,
And moonshine floweth like a stream;
Then is the hour
That hearts which love no longer dream,—
Then is the hour
That the voice of love is a spell of power!

When shamefaced moonbeams kiss the lake,
And amorous leaves sweet music wake;
When slumber steals o'er every eye,
And Dian's self shines drowsily;
Then is the hour
That hearts which love with rapture sigh,—
Then is the hour
That the voice of love is a spell of power!

A Letter to Cousin F. R.

In secret Yearning for thy Preservation,
Endeared Friend, I send the Salutation
Of Love unfeign'd, and heartily desire
Its pure Refining Flame may ne'er expire,
Or be extinguish'd: For 'twas said of old,
Iniquities abound, when Love grows cold.
Now, though thy silent Pen doth testifie,
There's some (yet latent) cause of Jealousie:
I'll not my Rival envy, if it be
One worthy to be entertain'd by thee,
Without Detraction from that innate Worth,
Whereto (I hope) thou art by second Birth
Entituled. But can Affairs so crow'd,

The Gorse

Upon the lonely moorland,
Ah, what a weary day!
The stream was loud and turbid,
The sombre sky was grey;
And though the gorse was golden,
My love was far away.

Upon the lonely moorland,
Ah, what a weary day!
The town was grey below me,
Beyond, the sea was grey;
And though the gorse was golden,
My love was far away.

Over the lonely moorland
There stole at last a ray
Of sunlight through the rifting
Of sombre clouds and grey;
Though sun and gorse were golden,
My love was far away.

Across the barren moorland

Love and Vanity

The breezy morning breath'd perfume.
The wakening flow'rs unveil'd their bloom,
Up with the sun, from short repose,
Gay Health and lusty Labour rose;
The milk-maid caroll'd at her pail,
And shepherds whistled o'er the dale,
When Love, who led a rural life,
Remote from bustle, state, and strife,
Forth from his thatch'd-roof cottage stray'd,
And stroll'd along the dewy glade.
A nymph, who lightly tripp'd it by,
To quick attention turn'd his eye;
He mark'd the gesture of the fair,
Her self-sufficient grace and air,

Love's Despair

Full of the fever of a hopeless love,
My heart's wild worship still is all thine own:
Unchanged—unchangeable—though doomed to move
O'er life's dim waste alone.

Ah! all too deep for words of mortal breath,
My lonely love is one perpetual smart;
Fain would I woo the quiet sleep of death
For this unquiet heart!

'Tis death to see thee in thy joyousness—
To meet thine eye, the smile upon thy lips,
And feel this world a blighted wilderness,
And life a vast eclipse!

So sad and weary! I would ask no more