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THE TROUBADOUR.
237


THE SONG OF THE TROUBADOUR.


    In some valley low and lone,
    Where I was the only one
    Of the human dwellers there,
    Would I dream away my care:
    I'd forget how in the world
    Snakes lay amid roses curl'd,
    I'd forget my once distress
    For young Love's insidiousness.
    False foes, and yet falser friends,
    Seeming but for their own ends;
    Pleasures known but by their wings,
    Yet remember'd by their stings;
    Gold's decrease, and health's decay,
    I will fly like these away,