Page:Troubadour.pdf/265

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JULIET AFTER THE MASQUERADE.
261


Yet sought she not her pillow, the cool air
Came from the casement, and it lured her there.
The terrace was beneath, and the pale moon
Shone o'er the couch which she had press'd at noon,
Soft-lingering o'er some minstrel's love-lorn page,—
Alas, tears are the poet's heritage!

    She flung her on that couch, but not for sleep;
No, it was only that the wind might steep
Her fever'd lip in its delicious dew:
Her brow was burning, and aside she threw
Her cap and plume, and, loosen'd from its fold,
Came o'er her neck and face a shower of gold,
A thousand curls. It was a solitude
Made for young hearts in love's first dreaming mood:—
Beneath the garden lay, fill'd with rose-trees
Whose sighings came like passion on the breeze.