1. Hang fear, cast away care
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English
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[--- This text is not currently in the database but will be added as soon as we obtain it. ---]
2. Love wakes and weeps
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English
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Love wakes and weeps
While Beauty sleeps ;
Oh! for music's softest numbers
To prompt a theme
For Beauty's dream,
Soft as the [pillow]1 of her slumbers!
Through groves of [palm]2
Sigh gales of balm ;
Fire-flies on the air are wheeling ;
While through the gloom
Comes soft perfume,
The distant beds of [flowers]3 revealing.
Oh! wake and live!
No dreams can give
A shadowed bliss the real excelling ;
No longer sleep
From lattice peep,
And list the tale that love is telling!
View text without footnotes
1 Strickland: "perfume"
2 Strickland: "palms"
3 Strickland: "ferns"
3. The mad dog
Language:
English
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Good people all, of every sort,
Give ear unto my song,
And if you find it wondrous short,
It cannot hold you long.
In Islington there was a man,
Of whom the world might say,
That still a godly race he ran,
Whene'er he went to pray.
A kind and gentle heart he had,
To comfort friends and foes;
The naked every day he clad,
When he put on his clothes.
And in that town a dog was found,
As many dogs there be,
Both mongrel, puppy, whelp, and hound,
And curs of low degree.
This dog and man at first were friends;
But when a pique began,
The dog, to gain his private ends,
Went mad, and bit the man.
Around from all the neighboring streets
The wond'ring neighbors ran,
And swore the dog had lost his wits,
To bite so good a man.
The wound it seem'd both sore and sad
To every Christian eye;
And while they swore the dog was mad,
They swore the man would die.
But soon a wonder came to light,
That show'd the rogues they lied:
The man recover'd of the bite --
The dog it was that died.
4. That very wise man, Old Aesop
Language:
English
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5. Orpheus
Language:
English
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[--- This text is not currently in the database but will be added as soon as we obtain it. ---]
6. Out upon it!
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Out upon it, I have loved
Three whole days together!
And am like to love three more,
If it prove fair weather.
Time shall moult away his wings
Ere he shall discover
In the whole wide world again
Such a constant lover.
But the spite on 't is, no praise
Is due at all to me:
Love with me had made no stays,
Had it any been but she.
Had it any been but she,
And that very face,
There had been at least ere this
A dozen dozen in her place.
7. An analogy
Language:
English
Authorship
[--- This text is not currently in the database but will be added as soon as we obtain it. ---]
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