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Eos:
An Epic of the Dawn, and Other Poems
By
Nicholas Flood Davin
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HYGEIA.
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O shining
mistress of the pure and strong!
Crown’d with May blossoms,
sun-lit thy blue eye—
Cans’t thou forgive my wanderings, oft and
long,
From thy firm bosom where
the bold may lie,
Nor fear the guilty pinion
hovering nigh?
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Fill, fill the wine cup! Drink, drink fathoms deep!
Crown you with garlands,
roses dewed with wine!
Hence carking care! Be banished gentle sleep!
Let Revel dance, gay wit’s
glad lightnings shine,
And laughter grow more loud
with night’s decline.
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The sun is up; the perfumed landscape glows;
The streams go silvering
thro’ the meadows green;
The golden mist o’er all things glory throws,
A thousand flowers breathe
incense round their queen
Whose white and red make
mock of Beauty’s sheen.
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Ah! my blithe reveller, where now art thou?
Thy beaming eye, quick wit,
wild laughter’s swell?
That eye is dull, dark gloom nods on thy brow,
Thy heart sways sadly, thy
hot brain’s a hell,
And e’en the wine
has lost its quick’ning spell.
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20 |
O shining mistress of the pure and free!
No more I’ll quit
thy strong inspiring hand,
Nor shun to joy with thee on life’s great
sea,
Whereon we’ll sail,
nor fear the fateful strand,
Where mid blanch’d
bones the chanting Sirens stand.
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