Page:Oxford Book of English Verse 1250-1918.djvu/749

 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY

You with the unpaid bill, Despair, You tiresome verse-reciter, Care, I will pay you in the grave, Death will listen to your stave. Expectation too, be off ! To-day is for itself enough. Hope, in pity, mock not Woe With smiles, nor follow where I go; Long having lived on your sweet food, At length I find one moment's good After long pain* with all your love, This you never told me of.'

Radiant Sister of the Day, Awake! arise! and come away! To the wild woods and the plains; And the pools where winter rains Image all their roof of leaves; Where the pine its garland weaves Of sapless green and ivy dun Round stems that never kiss the sun; Where the lawns and pastures be, And the sandhills of the sea; When the melting hoar-frost wets The daisy-star that never sets, And wind-flowers, and violets Which yet join not scent to hue, Crown the pale year weak and new; When the night is left behind In the deep east, dun and blind, And the blue noon is over us, And the multitudinous

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