Public Domain Poetry And Stories - To My Own Miniature Picture Taken At Two Years Of Age. by Robert Southey
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To My Own Miniature Picture Taken At Two Years Of Age.

    By Robert Southey



    And I was once like this! that glowing cheek
    Was mine, those pleasure-sparkling eyes, that brow
    Smooth as the level lake, when not a breeze
    Dies o'er the sleeping surface! twenty years
    Have wrought strange alteration! Of the friends
    Who once so dearly prized this miniature,
    And loved it for its likeness, some are gone
    To their last home; and some, estranged in heart,
    Beholding me with quick-averted glance
    Pass on the other side! But still these hues
    Remain unalter'd, and these features wear
    The look of Infancy and Innocence.
    I search myself in vain, and find no trace
    Of what I was: those lightly-arching lines
    Dark and o'erhanging now; and that mild face
    Settled in these strong lineaments!--There were
    Who form'd high hopes and flattering ones of thee
    Young Robert! for thine eye was quick to speak
    Each opening feeling: should they not have known
    When the rich rainbow on the morning cloud
    Reflects its radiant dies, the husbandman
    Beholds the ominous glory sad, and fears
    Impending storms? they augur'd happily,
    For thou didst love each wild and wonderous tale
    Of faery fiction, and thine infant tongue
    Lisp'd with delight the godlike deeds of Greece
    And rising Rome; therefore they deem'd forsooth
    That thou shouldst tread PREFERMENT'S pleasant path.
    Ill-judging ones! they let thy little feet
    Stray in the pleasant paths of POESY,
    And when thou shouldst have prest amid the crowd
    There didst thou love to linger out the day
    Loitering beneath the laurels barren shade.
    SPIRIT of SPENSER! was the wanderer wrong?
    This little picture was for ornament
    Design'd, to shine amid the motley mob
    Of Fashion and of Folly,--is it not
    More honour'd by this solitary song?



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