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Poems
and Essays
by
Joseph Howe
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TO
THE FIRE-FLY.
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Little
Insect, brightly gleaming
Through the murky shades
of night,
Most assiduously beaming
All around thy transient
light.
Still at eve, through air careering,
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Though
the scene be e’er so dark,
Yet your little light appearing,
Shines a gay resplendent
spark.
Shine again, thou pretty meteor,
Though the night be drear
and damp,
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Lovely,
lucid, speck of Nature
Light again thy little lamp.
Spread again thy airy pinion,
Let thy ray once more appear,
Come, dame Fortune’s favor’d minion,
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Learn
a moral lesson here. [Page 160]
Lull’d on luxury’s lap supinely,
What avails your worldly
pelf,
Though through life you glide divinely,
Yet you live but for yourself.
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View this little Fly, commencing
Undisturb’d, his evening
flight,
To proud man a ray dispensing—
Gen’rous Fly—to
guide him right.
With the little God has given,
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And
to worldly troubles blind
He lights his taper up at even,
Sparkles, flies, and is
resigned. [Page 161]
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