Sweet are the thoughts that stir the virgin's breast, When Love first enters there a timid guest; Before her dazzled eyes gay visions shine, And laughing Cupids wreaths of roses twine; And conscious Beauty hastens to employ Her span of empire and her dream of joy. Sarah, not thus to thee his power is shown. More stern he greets thee from his awful throne; Thee, called to bid thy cheering converse flow, And shed thy sweetness in the house of woe; The solemn sympathies of grief to share, And, sadly smiling, soothe a sister's care. O'er her young hopes the sable pall is spread: Her wedded heart holds converse with the dead. To ties no longer earthly, fondly true, Each thought that breathes of love, must breathe of heaven too. Thus, Sarah, Love thy nobler mind prepares, Shows thee his dangers, duties, sorrows, cares; Thus with severer lessons schools thy heart, And, pleased his happiest influence to impart, For thee, dismissing from his chastened train Each motley form of fickle, light or vain, Builds the strong fabric of that love sublime, Which conquers Death, and triumphs over Time. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...JUNE (1) by WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT ON DIGITAL EXTREMITIES by FRANK GELETT BURGESS FOUR SONNETS: 1 by FRANK DAVIS ASHBURN ECLOGUE ON ELIZABETH BELSHAM by ANNA LETITIA BARBAULD CAELIA: SONNETS: 3 by WILLIAM BROWNE (1591-1643) TOWARDS DEMOCRACY: PART 3. LOVE'S VISION by EDWARD CARPENTER |