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Percy Bysshe Shelley - Stanzas From Calderon`s Cisma De InglaterraPercy Bysshe Shelley - Stanzas From Calderon`s Cisma De Inglaterra
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I. Hast thou not seen, officious with delight, Move through the illumined air about the flower The Bee, that fears to drink its purple light, Lest danger lurk within that Rose`s bower? Hast thou not marked the moth`s enamoured flight About the Taper`s flame at evening hour; ‘Till kindle in that monumental fire His sunflower wings their own funereal pyre? II. My heart, its wishes trembling to unfold. Thus round the Rose and Taper hovering came, `And Passion’s slave, Distrust, in ashes cold. Smothered awhile, but could not quench the flame,`-- Till Love, that grows by disappointment bold, And Opportunity, had conquered Shame; And like the Bee and Moth, in act to close, `I burned my wings, and settled on the Rose.`
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