TO …. ….

And hast thou marked the pensive shade,

  That many a time obscures my brow,

Midst all the joys, beloved maid.

  Which thou canst give, and only thou?

Oh! 'tis not that I then forget

  The bright looks that before me shine;

For never throbbed a bosom yet

  Could feel their witchery, like mine.

When bashful on my bosom hid,

  And blushing to have felt so blest,

Thou dost but lift thy languid lid

  Again to close it on my breast;—

Yes,—these are minutes all thine own,

  Thine own to give, and mine to feel;

Yet even in them, my heart has known

  The sigh to rise, the tear to steal.

For I have thought of former hours,

  When he who first thy soul possest,

Like me awaked its witching powers,

  Like me was loved, like me was blest.

Upon his name thy murmuring tongue

  Perhaps hath all as sweetly dwelt;

Upon his words thine ear hath hung,

  With transport all as purely felt.

For him—yet why the past recall,

  To damp and wither present bliss?

Thou'rt now my own, heart, spirit, all,

  And heaven could grant no more than this!

Forgive me, dearest, oh! forgive;

  I would be first, be sole to thee,

Thou shouldst have but begun to live,

  The hour that gave thy heart to me.

Thy book of life till then effaced,

  Love should have kept that leaf alone

On which he first so brightly traced

  That thou wert, soul and all, my own.

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