Poems (Nealds)/Sonnet (How sweet at ev'ning's twilight hour)
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For works with similar titles, see Sonnet.
SONNET.
How sweet at ev'ning's twilight hour
To wander on the green hill's brow,
To hear mild Philomela pour
Her plaintive warblings, soft and low:
And sweet to see the silver moon
Play lightly on the foamy waves,
At midnight's bright and starry noon,
When sea-nymphs leave their coral caves.
But ah! we feel no real joy
If all alone our steps we bend;
But pleasure is without alloy,
When bless'd with Heav'n's best gift, a Friend.
The desert would to me an Eden prove,
If travers'd with the friend I dearly love.
To wander on the green hill's brow,
To hear mild Philomela pour
Her plaintive warblings, soft and low:
And sweet to see the silver moon
Play lightly on the foamy waves,
At midnight's bright and starry noon,
When sea-nymphs leave their coral caves.
But ah! we feel no real joy
If all alone our steps we bend;
But pleasure is without alloy,
When bless'd with Heav'n's best gift, a Friend.
The desert would to me an Eden prove,
If travers'd with the friend I dearly love.