Sonnets to Charlotte M— [1818 and 1828]
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 January 2022
Summary
Thou art but in life's morning, and as yet
The world looks witchingly: its fruits and flowers
Are fair and fragrant, and its beauteous bowers
Seem haunts of happiness, before thee set,
All lovely as a landscape freshly wet
With dew, or bright with sunshine after showers;
Where pleasure dwells, and Flora's magic powers
Woo thee to pluck joy's peerless coronet.
Thus be it ever:—wouldst thou have it so,
Preserve thy present openness of heart;—
Cherish those generous feelings which now start
At base dissimulation, and that glow
Of native love for ties which home endears;
And thou wilt find the world no vale of tears.
[1818]
“Thou art but in life's morning!”— Years have sped
Their silent flight since thus my idle rhyme
Addressed thee in thy being's opening prime;
If since that hour some clouds at times have spread
Their shadow o’er thy path, these have not shed
On thee their anger; but, from time to time,
Have led thy thoughts tow’rd sunnier heights to climb;
Communing with the loved, lamented dead!
And still thou art but in the glowing morn
Of thy existence: hearts of finest mould,
And warm affections claim their right to hold
Those purer, nobler feelings with them born,
Which will not let them droop, of hope forlorn,
Nor in a few brief years be changed and cold.
[1828]
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- Information
- Selected Poems of Bernard Barton, the 'Quaker Poet' , pp. 46 - 47Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2020