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Poem by Eliza Acton Nay! Take the Rose Nay! take the Rose, ere yet its grace, Its freshness, and its bloom, are gone; And be thy heart its resting place Until its young, sweet life be flown; For on that breast of honour shrin'd, A glorious death my flow'r will find; And it must perish soon—with thee It will but fade less lingeringly. Its leaves are tinted with the flush Of summer sunsets,— but that blush, Radiant as Love's, will pass away As dies in heav'n the smile of day. Its breath is odour's essence ;—ne'er Before did bud, or blossom, bear Such soul of perfume—oh! that aught So beautiful, should be so frail! It wakes a tone of sad'ning thought To dwelt upon its silent tale ;— Not for itself—but that it is An emblem of all human bliss. Eliza Acton Eliza Acton's other poems: 1279 Views |
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