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The Rosebuds

Yes, in that dainty ivory shrine,
With those three pallid buds, I twine
And fold away a dream divine!
 
One night they lay upon a breast
Where Love hath made his fragrant nest,
And throned me as a life-long guest.
 
Near that chaste heart they seemed to me
Types of far fairer flowers to be—
The rosebuds of a human tree!
 
Buds that shall bloom beside my hearth,
And there be held of richer worth
Than all the kingliest gems of earth.
 
Ah me! the pathos of the thought!
I had not deemed she wanted aught;
Yet what a tenderer charm it wrought!
 
I know not if she marked the flame
That lit my cheek, but not from shame,
When one sweet image dimly came.
 
There was a murmur soft and low;
White folds of cambric, parted slow;
And little fingers played with snow!
 
How far my fancy dared to stray,
A lover’s reverence needs not say—
Enough—the vision passed away!
 
Passed in a mist of happy tears,
While something in my tranced ears
Hummed like the future in a seer’s!
Other works by Henry Timrod...



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