Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Nunc Te Bacche Canam. by Edward Woodley Bowling
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Nunc Te Bacche Canam.

    By Edward Woodley Bowling



        'Tis done!    Henceforth nor joy nor woe
            Can make or mar my fate;
        I gaze around, above, below,
            And all is desolate.
        Go, bid the shattered pine to bloom;
            The mourner to be merry;
        But bid no ray to cheer the tomb
            In which my hopes I bury!

        I never thought the world was fair;
            That 'Truth must reign victorious';
        I knew that Honesty was rare;
            Wealth only meritorious.
        I knew that Women might deceive,
            And sometimes cared for money;
        That Lovers who in Love believe
            Find gall as well as honey.

        I knew that "wondrous Classic lore"
            Meant something most pedantic;
        That Mathematics were a bore,
            And Morals un-romantic.
        I knew my own beloved light-blue
            Might much improve their rowing:
        In fact, I knew a thing or two
            Decidedly worth knowing.

        But thou! - Fool, fool, I thought that thou
            At least wert something glorious;
        I saw thy polished ivory brow,
            And could not feel censorious.
        I thought I saw thee smile - but that
            Was all imagination;
        Upon the garden seat I sat,
            And gazed in adoration.

        I plucked a newly-budding rose,
            Our lips then met together;
        We spoke not - but a lover knows
            How lips two lives can tether.
        We parted!    I believed thee true;
            I asked for no love-token;
        But now thy form no more I view -
            My Pipe, my Pipe, thou'rt broken!

        Broken! - and when the Sun's warm rays
            Illumine hill and heather,
        I think of all the pleasant days
            We might have had together.
        When Lucifer's phosphoric beam
            Shines e'er the Lake's dim water,
        O then, my Beautiful, I dream
            Of thee, the salt sea's daughter.

        O why did Death thy beauty snatch
            And leave me lone and blighted,
        Before the Hymeneal match
            Our young loves had united?
        I knew thou wert not made of clay,
            I loved thee with devotion,
        Soft emanation of the spray!
            Bright, foam-born child of Ocean!

        One night I saw an unknown star,
            Methought it gently nodded;
        I saw, or seemed to see, afar
            Thy spirit disembodied.
        Cleansed from the stain of smoke and oil,
            My tears it bade me wipe,
        And there, relieved from earthly toil,
            I saw my Meerschaum pipe.

        Men offer me the noisome weed;
            But nought can calm my sorrow;
        Nor joy nor misery I heed;
            I care not for the morrow.
        Pipeless and friendless, tempest-tost
            I fade, I faint, I languish;
        He only who has loved and lost
            Can measure all my anguish.




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