To A Primrose
The first seen in the
Nitens et roboris
Turget et insolida est: et spe delectat.- Ovid,
Metam. [xv.203].
Thy smiles I note, sweet early Flower,
That peeping from thy rustic
The festive news to earth dost bring,
A fragrant messenger of Spring.
But, tender blossom, why so pale?
Dost hear stern Winter in the gale?
And didst thou tempt the ungentle
To catch one vernal glance and die?
Such the wan lustre Sickness
When Health's first feeble beam appears;
So languid are the smiles that
To settle on the care-worn cheek,
When timorous Hope the head uprears,
Still drooping and still moist with tears,
If, through dispersing grief, be
Of Bliss the heavenly spark serene.
And sweeter far the early blow,
Fast following after storms of Woe,
Than (Comfort's riper season come)Are full-blown joys and Pleasure's gaudy bloom.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Other author posts
Water Ballad
Come hither, gently rowing, Come, bear me quickly This stream so brightly To yonder woodland shore
Fragment
The body, Eternal Shadow of the finite Soul, The Soul's self-symbol, its image of itself Its own yet not itself—
The Suicides Argument
Ere the birth of my life, if I wished it or No question was asked me--it could not be so If the life was the question, a thing sent to And to live on be
Constancy To An Ideal Object
Since all, that beat about in Nature's range, Or veer or vanish; why should'st thou The only constant in a world of change, O yearning