Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Odes Of Anacreon - Ode XLVI. by Thomas Moore
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Odes Of Anacreon - Ode XLVI.

    By Thomas Moore



[1]


    Behold, the young, the rosy Spring,
    Gives to the breeze her scented wing:
    While virgin Graces, warm with May;
    Fling roses o'er her dewy way.
    The murmuring billows of the deep
    Have languished into silent sleep;
    And mark! the flitting sea-birds lave
    Their plumes in the reflecting wave;
    While cranes from hoary winter fly
    To flutter in a kinder sky.
    Now the genial star of day
    Dissolves the murky clouds away;
    And cultured field, and winding stream,
    Are freshly glittering in his beam.

        Now the earth prolific swells
    With leafy buds and flowery bells;
    Gemming shoots the olive twine,
    Clusters ripe festoon the vine;
    All along the branches creeping,
    Through the velvet foliage peeping,
    Little infant fruits we see,
    Nursing into luxury.



Extra Info:
[1] The fastidious affectation of some commentators has denounced this ode as spurious. Degen pronounces the four last lines to be the patch-work of some miserable versificator, and Brunck condemns the whole ode. It appears to me, on the contrary, to be elegantly graphical: full of delicate expressions and luxuriant imagery.



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