Page:The works of Anna Laetitia Barbauld volume 1.djvu/227

Rh "In my rich fields now boast the ravage done, Those lesser spoils,—her brow, her cheek, her hair, All that the touches of decay can feel,— Take these, she has enough besides to spare; I cannot thee dislodge, nor shalt thou me, So thou and I, old Time, perforce must once agree. "Nor is the boasted ravage all thine own, Nor was the field by conquest fairly gained; For leagued with Sickness, Life and Nature's foe, That fiend accurst thy savage wars maintained; His hand the furrows sunk where thou didst plough, He undermined the tree, where thou didst shake the bough. "But both unite, for both I here defy; Spoil ye have made, but have no triumphs won; And though the daffodil more freshly blooms, Spreading her gay leaves to the morning sun, Yet never will I leave the faded rose, Whilst the pale lovely flower such sweetness still bestows."