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So, William, from the moral world
The clouds shall pass away;

The light that struggles through them now
Shall beam eternal day.

TO THE BURNIE* BEE.

BLITHE SON of summer, furl thy filmy wing,
Alight beside me on this bank of moss;
Yet to its sides the lingering shadows cling,
And sparkling dews the dark-green tufts emboss.

Here mayst thou freely quaff the nectar'd sweet
That in the violet's purple chalice hides,
Here on the lily scent thy fringed feet,

Or with the wild-thyme's balm anoint thy sides.
Back o'er thy shoulders throw those ruby shards
With many a tiny coal-black freckle deckt,
My watchful look thy loitering saunter guards,
My ready hand thy footstep shall protect.

Daunted by me beneath this trembling bough
On forked wing no greedy swallow sails,
No hopping sparrow pries for food below,
Nor evet lurks, nor dusky blindworm trails.
Nor shall the swarthy gaoler for thy way

His grate of twinkling threads successful strain, With venom'd trunk thy writhing members slay, Or from thy heart the reeking life's-blood drain.

Forego thy wheeling in the sunny air,

Thy glancing to the envious insects round, To the dim calmness of my bower repair,

Silence and coolness keep its hallowed ground.

Here to the elves who sleep in flowers by day
Thy softest hum in lulling whispers pour,
Or o'er the lovely band thy shield display,
When blue-eyed twilight sheds her dewy shower.

* A provincial name of the beetle coccinella, or lady-bird.

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