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Sonnet. On The Death Of Mrs. Charlotte Smith.

Topics: classic

Sweet songstress! whom the melancholy Muse     With more than fondness loved, for thee she strung     The lyre, on which herself enraptured hung,     And bade thee through the world its sweets diffuse.     Oft hath my childhood's tributary tear     Paid homage to the sad harmonious strain,     That told, alas! too true, the grief and pain     Which thy afflicted mind was doom'd to bear.     Rest, sainted spirit! from a life of woe,     And though no friendly hand on thee bestow     The stately marble, or emblazon'd name,     To tell a thoughtless world who sleeps below:     Yet o'er thy narrow bed a wreath shall blow.     Deriving vigour from the breath of fame!

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"Sweet songstress! whom the melancholy Muse..."

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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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