Skip to main content

Through a Glass

" WE see now, through a glass darkly, "
Because we are of the Earth;
We shall see with the eyes of the spirit
In the land of our re-birth.

Because God loves us dearly,
He sent to us the Light,
Which " Shineth in the darkness, "
To guide our souls aright.

Love But One

See these two little Brooks that slowly creep
In Snaky windings through the Plains,
I knew them once one River, swift and deep,
Blessing and blest with Poets strains.

Then touch'd by Aw, we thought some God did powr
Those flouds from out his sacred Jar,
Transforming every Weed into a Flow'r
And every Flower into a Star.

But since it broke it self, and double glides,
The Naked Banks no dress have worn.

Ballade of Horace's Loves

Lydia, fickle and fair,
Lyce, the faded of hue,
Lalage, Pholoi...there!
Hark how the l's ripple through.
These were the beauties that drew,
These lilting and lyrical dames!
Leuconoi, Glycera ... Pooh!
Why, Horace, they're nothing but names!

Pyrrha, the golden of hair,
Lyde the lyrist, the shrew
Myrtale ... well, I declare!
What in the world shall we do

A Sigh Sent to His Absent Love

I sent a Sigh unto my Blest ones Eare,
Which lost it's way, and never did come there;
I hastned after, lest some other Fair
Should mildly entertain this travelling Aire:
Each flowry Garden I did search, for fear
It might mistake a Lilly for her Eare;
And having there took lodging, might still dwell
Hous'd in the Concave of a Christall Bell.
At last, one frosty morning I did spy
This subtile Wand'rer journeying in the Sky;
At sight of me it trembled, then drew neer,
Then grieving fell, and dropt into a Tear:

William and Mary

Young William once the blithest of the swains,
That grac'd the flow'ry bank, or trode the plains;
Not rustic, but from affectation free,
Still courteous, kind, and affable was he.
Of gentlest manners, ever form'd to please;
His mind unruffl'd, ever blest with ease;
His mien engaging, sweet beyond compare;
His breath delicious as the fragrant air;
His nature prone, attractive sweets t' impart,
Good without shew, and lovely without art.

Each nymph him priz'd, and oft they sought, in vain,

Exercise in Emphasis, An

I looked! I loved! And passion burned
With violence Vesuvian
Until the fatal day I learned
He was a married man!

The good ones seldom trot alone;
They jog in Hymen's silken span.
Ah, foolish me! I might have known
He was a married man.

Oh, who can fathom my distress!
Incredulous, I murmured, " Can
This thing be true? " Ah, yes; ah, yes —
He was a married man!