Page:Cheskian Anthology.pdf/213

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202

Sonnet 23.


Sotwy že se smélšj opowážj.

The busy thoughts to narrow bounds confin'd,

Struggle for wider fields; and beat the wires

Of their poor cage:—impatience makes them blind

In gazing on the light of vain desires,

And they disperse—but hope broods o'er the mind,

And warms its dreams and fans its sleeping fires,

Till like that glorious bird that never tires,

It sits aloft in clouds and stars enshrin'd.

For me has virtue flower'd on love's sweet stem,

At Vesta's altar I have pour'd my vows:

I have tied wreaths of worship round the brows

Of Milek,[1] and I wear his diadem,—

To suffering he the stamp of joy has given,

And poor'd on earth the sunny light of heaven.

  1. Cupid.