Page:Landon in Literary Gazette 1822.pdf/39

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TIME arresting the Career of PLEASURE.
38
Literary Gazette, 27th July, 1822, Page 473 (cont.)


O'er which thy dimple-smile is wreathing;
Incense on thy lip is breathing;
Light and Love are round thy soul,—
But thunder peals o'er June-skies roll;
Even now the storm is near—
Then stay thee on thy mad career!

Raise thine eyes to yonder sky,
There is writ thy destiny;
Clouds have veiled the new moonlight;
Stars have fallen from their height;
These are emblems of the fate
That waits thee—dark and desolate!
All Morn's lights are now thine own,
Soon their glories will be gone;
What remains when they depart?
Faded hope, and withered heart
Like a flower with no perfume
To keep a memory of its bloom!
Look upon that hour-marked round,
Listen to that fateful sound;
There my silent hand is stealing.
My more silent course revealing;
Wild, devoted Pleasure, hear,—
Stay thee on thy mad career!——L. E. L.