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Sonnet LVI. To A Timid Young Lady, Distressed By The Attentions Of An Amiable, AndAcceptedLover.

Topics: classic

What bashful wildness in those crystal eyes,         Fair Zillia! - Ah! more dear to LOVE the gaze         That dwells upon its object, than the rays         Of that vague glance, quick, as in summer skies      The lightning's lambent flash, when neither rise         Thunder, nor storm. - I mark, while transport plays         Warm in thy Lover's eye, what dread betrays         Thy throbbing heart: - yet why from his soft sighs      Fleet'st thou so swift away? - like the young Hind[1],         That bending stands the fountain's brim beside,         When, with a sudden gust, the western wind      Rustles among the boughs that shade the tide:         See, from the stream, innoxious and benign,         Starting she bounds, with terror vain as thine!     1: "Vitas hinnuleo me similis Chloe." HORACE.

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"What bashful wildness in those crystal eyes,..."

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

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