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Littell's Living Age/Volume 140/Issue 1811/A Borrower

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[An answer to F. W. ⁠Bourdillon's "Two Robbers.]

3305600Littell's Living Age, Volume 140, Issue 1811 — A BorrowerW. P. A.

A BORROWER.
AN ANSWER TO MR. BOURDILLON.

While Time, the cunning, mars
Surely all loveliness.

The sculptor's chisel mars
The marble's spotless snow;
But by those cruel scars
New loveliness doth grow.

A form of ideal grace
Slept in the smooth white stone;
The steel's relentless-trace,
That nobler charm has won.

Time's chisels, hard and stern,
May youthful beauty slay;
But beauty they return
More perfect every way.

We cared not for the stone,
Nor for its faultless white;
But on the statue grown,
We gaze in fixed delight.

W. P. A..