A Trifle
I know not why, but ev'n to me My songs seem sweet when read to thee. Perhaps in this the pleasure lies - I read my thoughts within thine eyes. And so dare fancy that my art May sink as deeply as thy heart. Perhaps I love to make my words Sing round thee like so many birds, Or, maybe, they are only sweet As they seem offerings at thy feet. Or haply, Lily, when I speak, I think, perchance, they touch thy cheek, Or with a yet more precious bliss, Die on thy red lips in a kiss. Each reason here - I cannot tell - Or all perhaps may solve the spell. But if she watch when I am by, Lily may deeper see than I.
Henry Timrod’s other poems:
- The Stream is Flowing from the West
- An Exotic
- Hymn Sung at an Anniversary of the Asylum of Orphans at Charleston
- Lines to R. L.
- To Whom?
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