Letitia Elizabeth Landon

Nymph and Zephyr: A Statuary Group. by Westmacott

AND the summer sun shone in the sky,
And the rose’s whole life was in its sigh,
When her eyelids were kiss’d by a morning beam,
And the Nymph rose up from her moonlit dream;
For she had watch’d the midnight hour
Till her head had bow’d like a sleeping flower;
But now she had waken’d, and light and dew
Gave her morning freshness and morning hue,—
Up she sprang, and away she fled
O’er the lithe grass stem and the blossom’s head,
From the lillies’ bells she dash’d not the spray,
For her feet were as light and as white as they.
Sudden upon her arm there shone
A gem with the hues of an Indian stone,
And she knew the insect bird whose wing
Is sacred to PSYCHE and to spring;
But scarce had her touch its captive prest
Ere another prisoner was on her breast,
And the Zephyr sought his prize again,—
‘No,’ said the Nymph, thy search is vain:
And her golden hair from its braided yoke
Burst like the banner of hope as she spoke,
‘And instead, fair boy, thou shalt moralize
Over the pleasure that from thee flies;
Then it is pleasure,—for we possess
But in the search, not in the success.’
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