O STRANGER! if Anacreon's shell Has ever taught thy heart to swell With passion's throb or pleasure's sigh, In pity turn, as wandering nigh, And drop thy goblet's richest tear In exquisite libation here! So shall my sleeping ashes thrill With visions of enjoyment still. I cannot even in death resign The festal joys that once were mine, When Harmony pursued my ways, And Bacchus wanton'd to my lays. Oh! if delight could charm no more, If all the goblet's bliss were o'er, When fate had once our doom decreed, Then dying would be death indeed! Nor could I think, unblest by wine, Divinity itself divine! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...HISTORY OF A LIFE by BRYAN WALLER PROCTER TO THE MEMORY OF THE LATE REV. GILBERT WAKEFIELD by LUCY AIKEN A WINTER'S NIGHT IN IRONDEQUOIT by EMMA MAGIN BISSELL FAMILIARITY by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN ANY LOVER TO HIS LASS by BERTON BRALEY SONNETS OF SEVEN CITIES: PITTSBURGH by BERTON BRALEY OUR FIFTY-FIFTH; 1843-1897 by WILLIAM ALLEN BUTLER |