XVI.
TTHE daisy-flower is to the summer sweet,Though utterly unknown it live and die;The spheral harmony were incompleteDid the dew’d laverock mount no more the sky,Because her music’s linkëd sorceryBewitched no mortal heart to heavenly mood.This is the law of nature, that the deedShould dedicate its excellence to God,And in so doing find sufficient meed.Then why should I make these heart-burning cries,In sickly rhyme with morbid feeling rife,For fame and temporal felicities?Forgetting that in holy labour liesThe scholarship severe of human life.
TTHE daisy-flower is to the summer sweet,Though utterly unknown it live and die;The spheral harmony were incompleteDid the dew’d laverock mount no more the sky,Because her music’s linkëd sorceryBewitched no mortal heart to heavenly mood.This is the law of nature, that the deedShould dedicate its excellence to God,And in so doing find sufficient meed.Then why should I make these heart-burning cries,In sickly rhyme with morbid feeling rife,For fame and temporal felicities?Forgetting that in holy labour liesThe scholarship severe of human life.
TTHE daisy-flower is to the summer sweet,Though utterly unknown it live and die;The spheral harmony were incompleteDid the dew’d laverock mount no more the sky,Because her music’s linkëd sorceryBewitched no mortal heart to heavenly mood.This is the law of nature, that the deedShould dedicate its excellence to God,And in so doing find sufficient meed.Then why should I make these heart-burning cries,In sickly rhyme with morbid feeling rife,For fame and temporal felicities?Forgetting that in holy labour liesThe scholarship severe of human life.
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