Page:The Improvisatrice.pdf/122

110

It is a night of summer,—and the sea Sleeps, like a child, in mute tranquillity. Soft o'er the deep-blue wave the moonlight breaks; Gleaming, from out the white clouds of its zone, Like beauty's changeful smile, when that it seeks Some fact it loves yet fears to dwell upon. The waves are motionless, save where the oar, Light as Love's anger, and as quickly gone, Has broken in upon their azure sleep. Odours are on the air:—the gale has been Wandering in groves where the rich roses weep,— Where orange, citron, and soft lime-flowers Shed forth their fragrance to night's dewy hours. Afar the distant city meets the gaze, Where tower and turret in the pale light shine, Seen like the monuments of other days— Monuments Time half shadows, half displays.