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The Pastor's Daughter.

Topics: classic

An ivy-mantled cottage smiled,         Deep-wooded near a streamlet's side,     Where dwelt the village-pastor's child,         In all her maiden bloom and pride.     Proud suitors paid their court and duty     To this romantic sylvan beauty:     Yet none of all the swains who sought her,     Was worthy of the pastor's daughter.     The town-gallants crossed hill and plain,         To seek the groves of her retreat;     And many followed in her train,         To lay their riches at her feet.     But still, for all their arts so wary,     From home they could not lure the fairy.     A maid without a heart they thought her,     And so they left the pastor's daughter.     One balmy eve in dewy spring         A bard became her father's guest:     He struck his harp, and every string         To love vibrated in her breast.     With that true faith which can not falter,     Her hand was given at the alter,     And faithful was the heart he brought her     To wedlock and the pastor's daughter.     How seldom learn the worldly gay         With all their sophistry and art,     The sweet and gentle primrose-way         To woman's fond, devoted heart!     They seek, but never find, the treasure     Revealed in eyes of jet and azure.     To them, like truth in wells of water,     A fable is the pastor's daughter.

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"An ivy-mantled cottage smiled,..."

This evocative piece by George Pope Morris, titled "The Pastor's Daughter.", represents a masterful exploration of classic. The lines capture a profound emotional resonance... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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