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MISCELLANEOUS
POEMS
By
Charles Sangster
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ELIZABETH’S
BIRTH.
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At Elizabeth’s birth Love’s fair Goddess
presided
O’er a quorum of
dames in her high court above;
On the child’s future gifts all were strangely
divided,
And contentions ran high
through that Chamber of Love.
“I
claim her,” said Beauty, “her cheeks
are as roses, |
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Her brow as the Parian marble is fair;
And see these sweet dimples! in each one reposes
A sting for intrusion,
a balm for despair.”
“She
is mine! she is mine!” said the Goddess
of Pleasure,
“What heart-thrilling
looks are concealed in her eyes! |
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She
shall revel in joys and delights without measure,
Such as seldom are felt
in our own sunny skies.” [Page 113]
The
Goddess of Mirth, her gay voice loudly ringing
Through the golden-roofed
arches of that solemn court,
Laid claim to the sleeper, now laughing, now singing, |
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Uniting with Pleasure to furnish her sport.
Like
the first purple flush of the warm light of Morning,
That tinges the east
with its mellowy hue,
The Goddess of Smiles, that rich chamber adorning,
In ravishing sweetness
arose on the view. |
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And pointing with joy to the innocent sleeper,
Her eyes filled radiance,
her looks all divine,
Said, in musical accents, “She’s mine!
I will keep her
’Neath my sheltering
wing—She is mine! she is mine!”
As
Venus, her wand in the air gently waving, |
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Approvingly tendered the gift to the child,
A shower of sunlight came down, gently laving
The innocent’s
face, and Elizabeth smiled.
The
Angel of Goodness her watch had been keeping,
Unperceived by the lovely
disputants till now, |
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And
softly approaching the infant while sleeping,
Gently placed her fair
seal on the slumberer’s brow.
But
Cupid, who’d witness the scene from his
bower,
Now tendered his claim,
with so artful a grace,
That his mother, embracing him, gave him the power |
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To mix Love with the Smiles on Elizabeth’s
face. [Page 114] |
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