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Landon in The Literary Gazette 1823/Alaric Watts

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For works with similar titles, see Lines (Letitia Elizabeth Landon).
Poems (1823)
by Letitia Elizabeth Landon
Lines Addressed to Alaric A. Watts, Esq.
2257044PoemsLines Addressed to Alaric A. Watts, Esq.1823Letitia Elizabeth Landon

Literary Gazette 8th November 1823, Page 719


LINES
Addressed to Alaric A. Watts, Esq. on receiving a
Copy of his Poetical Fragments and Sketches.

There is a dear and a lovely power
Dwells in the silence of the flower,
When the buds meet the caress
Of the bee in their loneliness:—
In the song the green leaves sing
When they waken and wave in Spring;
In the voice of the April bird,
The first air-music the year has heard;
In the deep and glorious light
Of the thousand stars at night;
In the dreaming of the moon,
Bright in her solitary noon;
In the tones of the plaining brook;
In the light of a first love look;
And in each bright and beautiful thing,
That has aught of fine imagining,
That power is dwelling. Now need I
Name the bright power of Poesy?
And, graceful Bard! it has breathed on thee
A breath of the life which is melody,
And given thy lute the touching strain
Which the heart but hears to echo again.
    Mine is not the hand that flings
Living or lasting offerings;
With thy laurel, not mine the lay
That either gives or takes away.
Others may praise thy harp,—for me
To praise were only a mockery;
The tribute I offer is such a one
As the young bird would pour, if the sun
Or the air were pleasant: thanks, not praise,—
Oh, not to laud, but to feel thy lays!—L. E. L.