Yet I have often seen thee bring Thy beams o'er yon bare mountain's steep; Then, with a smile, their lustre fling Full on the dark and roaring deep; When the pilgrim's heart did fail, And when near lost the tossing sail. Sure, that passing blush deceives ; For thou, fair nymph, art chaste and cold ! Love our bosoms seldom leaves; But thou art of a different mould. Hail, chaste queen! for ever hail ! And, prithee, look not quite so pale ! Yet stay-perhaps thou'st travelld far, Exulting in thy conscious light; Till, as I fear, some youthful Star Hath spread his charms before thy sight; And, when he found his arts prevail, He left thee, sickening, faint, and pale. The Owl. (From the same MS.) Through the clouds that cover her, Darts her light upon the stream, Pleas'd I hear thy boding cry! While the maiden, pale with care, Wanders to the lonely shade, Shrinks to hear thy boding cry, While the wretch, with mournful dole, Wrings his hands in agony, Shrinks to hear thy boding cry, |