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William Cowper - Written In A Fit Of Illness. R. S. S.William Cowper - Written In A Fit Of Illness. R. S. S.
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In these sad hours, a prey to ceaseless pain, While feverish pulses leap in every vein, When each faint breath the last short effort seems Of life just parting from my feeble limbs; How wild soe`er my wandering thoughts may be, Still, gentle Delia, still they turn on thee! At length if, slumbering to a short repose, A sweet oblivion frees me from my woes, Thy form appears, thy footsteps I pursue, Through springy vales, and meadows washed in dew; Thy arm supports me to the fountain`s brink, Where by some secret power forbid to drink, Gasping with thirst, I view the tempting flood That flies my touch, or thickens into mud; Till thine own hand immerged the goblet dips, And bears it streaming to my burning lips. There borne aloft on fancy`s wing we fly, Like souls embodied to their native sky; Now every rock, each mountain, disappears; And the round earth an even surface wears; When lo! the force of some resistless weight, Bears me straight down from that pernicious height; Parting, in vain our struggling arms we close; Abhorred forms, dire phantoms interpose; With trembling voice on thy loved name I call; And gulfs yawn ready to receive my fall. From these fallacious visions of distress I wake; nor are my real sorrows less. Thy absence, Delia, heightens every ill, And gives e`en trivial pains the power to kill. Oh! wert thou near me; yet that wish forbear! `Twere vain, my love,--`twere vain to wish thee near; Thy tender heart would heave with anguish too, And by partaking, but increase my woe. Alone I`ll grieve, till gloomy sorrow past, Health, like the cheerful day-spring, comes at last,-- Comes fraught with bliss to banish every pain, Hope, joy, and peace, and Delia in her train!
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