Ionica
loving looks Was freezing into barren pride. His squalid discontent they saw, And, for that he had worshipped them With incense and with anadem, They willed his wintry world should thaw; And at thy cradle did decree That fifteen years should pass, and thou Should'st breathe upon that pallid brow Favonian airs of mirth and glee. 

  

       A NEW YEAR'S DAY     

      Our planet runs through liquid space, And sweeps us with her in the race; And wrinkles gather on my face, And Hebe bloom on thine:      Our sun with his encircling spheres Around the central sun careers; And unto thee with mustering years Come hopes which I resign.       'Twere sweet for me to keep thee still Reclining halfway up the hill; But time will not obey the will, And onward thou must climb:      'Twere sweet to pause on this descent, To wait for thee and pitch my tent, But march I must with shoulders bent, Yet farther from my prime. I shall not tread thy battle-field, Nor see the blazon on thy shield; Take thou the sword I could not wield, And leave me, and forget Be fairer, braver, more admired; So win what feeble hearts desired;      Then leave thine arms, when thou art tired, To some one nobler yet. 

  

       A CRUISE     

      Your princely progress is begun; And pillowed on the bounding deck You break with dark brown hair a sun That falls transfigured on your neck. Sail on, and charm sun, wind, and sea. Oh! might that love-light rest on me! Vacantly lingering with the hours, The sacred hours that still remain From that rich month of fruits and flowers Which brought you near me once again, By thoughts of you, though roses die, I strive to make it still July. Soft waves are strown beneath your prow, Like carpets for a victor's feet; You call slow zephyrs to your brow, In listless luxury complete:      Love, the true Halcyon, guides your ship; Oh, might his pinion touch my lip! I by the shrunken river stroll; And changed, since I was left alone, With tangled weed and rising shoal, The loss I mourn he seems to own:      This is, how base soe'er his sloth, This is the stream that bore us both. For you shall granite peaks uprise As old and scornful as your race, And fringed with firths of lucent dyes The jewelled beach your limbs 
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