Poems and sonnets of Louise Chandler Moulton / [by Louise Chandler Moulton] [electronic text]

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Title
Poems and sonnets of Louise Chandler Moulton / [by Louise Chandler Moulton] [electronic text]
Author
Moulton, Louise Chandler, 1835-1908
Publication
Boston, Mass.: Little, Brown, and Company
1909
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http://name.umdl.umich.edu/BAD9453.0001.001
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"Poems and sonnets of Louise Chandler Moulton / [by Louise Chandler Moulton] [electronic text]." In the digital collection American Verse Project. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/BAD9453.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 2, 2024.

Pages

A POET'S SECOND LOVE.
I.
I SHARE your heart with her, its former Queen, Who taught your lips the song of love to sing— To whose high altar you were wont to bring Such laurels as no Fair since Time hath been Has decked her brow with. Joy was there and teen, And reverence, as for some most sacred thing Set high in Heaven for all men's worshipping; Such laurels gathers no man twice, I ween.
Your second love, ungarlanded, uncrowned— Fit for life's daily uses, let us say— Whose lips have never thrilled you with sweet sound, Hears from the grave your first love's voice, to-day. With scornful laughter mock her hope to fill The heart ruled by its earliest sovereign still.

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II.
Not mine the spell to charm your lute to song; A poet you, yet not for me your lays; You crowned that other woman with your praise, Lifting your voice to Heaven, triumphant, strong, And later rhymes might do her laurels wrong; Should you and I together tread life's ways, An echo would pursue us from old days, And men would say—"He loved once, well and long, So now without great love he is content, Since she is dead whose praise he used to sing, And daily needs demand their ailment.". . . Thus some poor bird, who strives with broken wing To soar, might stoop—strength gone and glad life spent— To any hand that his scant food would bring.
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