YE ROSES, WITH HER BLUSHES, BLow.
No opera-box invites the stare
Of coxcombs, Kate, your charms to see. What matters that? you only care To show your beauty, Kate, to me. If 'mongst the gods we see the play, If poor-drest balls are ours, I'm sure Our laughs and happy hearts can say, If mirth be wealth, we are not poor.
And O, our garret, Kate, can tell, Although its walls be somewhat bare, That friendship loves its comfort well, And laughter's always noisy there; And love, who flies from state and fuss, Makes ours his dearest home, I'm sure. Is he not always, Kate, with us? And, rich in love, can we be poor?
YE ROSES, WITH HER BLUSHES, BLOW.
YE roses, with her blushes, blow;
Ye lilies, lift her neck of snow;
Thou dusky night, ye starry skies,
Show forth the dark light of her eyes;
Thou rosy morning, steal to earth
With her gay smiles, her sparkling mirth ;
You, dewy tears of twilight eves,
Weep softly, softly as she grieves,
That ever she may present be
In all sweet sounds we hear, in all sweet sights we see.
Thou, Music, with her low tones stir Our hearts thou, Painting, image her; And thou, white Sculpture, let her seem To smile from every marble dream Of thine, that she may ever be Fair in all fair things shaped by thee;
And thou, O Poet, to her give, Sweet, in thy sweetest songs to live,
So thou, blest Art, shalt give her part
In all thy lustrous life in man's delighted heart.
FOR you-for you—I live for you ; And, if I long for fame, "Tis that I'd give
For ages with your name. I thirst for fame, 'tis true, But then 'tis fame for you.
For you for you-I live for you; Yes, wealth indeed I crave, That all that I
With wealth can buy, You, dearest, you may have. I would have gold, 'tis true, But then 'tis gold for you.
For you-for you—I live for you; No day but brings this heart Your thought with light; No dream has night
In which you have not part. I live, I breathe, 'tis true; But, love, I live for you.
TO THE MEMORY OF ROBERT BURNS. BORN JANUARY 25, 1759.
AND he was born a century since!
What matters that to him?
Years dull the fame of peer and prince,
But his what years can dim?
TO THE MEMORY OF ROBERT BURNS.
No; he whom falser glories dread, Old Time, would scorn to wrong One laurel on the glorious head Of this our king of song.
Fill! If cold to his fame there be One Scot, him Scotland spurns. Up, Scotchmen all, and drink with me, "Our glory-Robert Burns !"
Ah, friends! old Scotland's heart to warm, Another comes not soon
Like him bestow'd on her in storm Upon the banks of Doon.
O clay-built cot that gave him birth, Where is your name not known— Your name, poor hut, that gave to earth The man earth's proud to own? Fill! Proud of him we well may be, Whose words no child but learns. Up, Scotchmen all, with three times three, And drink to "Robert Burns!"
The very air he breathed is dear To all, whate'er their lots.
O fields he trod! what heart is here But holds you holy spots ?
O Ellisland! No Scot is he A glow who does not feel To hear thy name, or more to see Thy lowly roof, Mossgiel ! What Scottish heart, where'er it be In farthest lands, but yearns, Ere death, the very homes to see That shelter'd Robert Burns?
"Twas his our meanest wants to know, Our worst toils to endure;
But, more—to pride and wealth to show What souls God gives the poor.
How little Heaven for titles cares, How well his genius told,
That rank is but the stamp it bears,
That man's the sterling gold! No nobler truth the world can know Than this from him it learns, The high may be beneath the low. Then drink "The Ploughman Burns!"
And were they sung so long ago? Well, time but makes more dear His songs, that do but sweeter grow, And sweeter with each year. O tender strains, how well you told Our fathers' joys and fears! The self-same power to-day you hold To speak our laughs and tears. Than this that it was his to know, That now our reverence earns, No nobler power God gives below— Then drink, "The Poet Burns!"
Flow on, O Ayr-O Nith, flow on- Soft murmur of his praise
Who shower'd yet richer charms upon
Your bonny banks and braes! Through him how many a dear, dear scene
A sweeter beauty fills!
More green your valleys' tender green, More dear your heathy hills; Where breathes the Scot who, far or near,
But to old Scotland yearns?
Then fill to him who made more dear Her hills and vales,-to "Burns !"
O poet! let thy heart rejoice Wherever now thou art;
Thy songs still live in every voice, Still throb through every heart.
In every clime those songs are heard ; What nations from us spring!
And still, where sounds an English word, O Burns, thy songs they sing!
PRITHEE TELL ME WHERE LOVE DWELLS.
And long as hearts shall sink and swell With grief and mirth by turns,
Those songs our joys and griefs shall tell— Then drink to " Robert Burns !"
And O, not only through our days Shall "Auld lang syne" be sung, And, praised with tears, "Ye banks and braes," Shall linger from each tongue. To those dear words, to unborn eyes Unbidden tears shall steal, While time an English heart supplies Their tender charm to feel. Then up! to him your glasses raise To whom your love so yearns, Whom unborn hearts shall love and praise, Up! Scotchmen,-" Robert Burns!"
Yet let not Scotland rise alone
To this our loving toast;
No; England claims him as her own, Her glory and her boast.
Then up-up all !—and fill with me Your glasses to the brim ;
Our common pride he well may be, Let all, then, drink to him. The fame of him whose matchless songs
No English tongue but learns,
To all of English blood belongs;
Fill all-to "Robert Burns!"
PRITHEE TELL ME WHERE LOVE DWELLS.
PRITHEE tell me where Love dwells!
'Neath a forehead whiter far
Than the whitest lilies are;
'Neath a drooping lash of silk Blacker far than carven jet,
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