Charlotte Turner Smith
          
Elegiac sonnets. Volume 1 of 2
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SONNET LIV.

THE SLEEPING WOODMAN.
WRITTEN IN APRIL 1790.
YE copses wild, where April bids arise
         The vernal grasses, and the early flowers;
My soul depress'd from human converse flies
         To the lone shelter of your pathless bowers.
Lo! where the Woodman, with his toil oppress'd,
         His careless head, on bark and moss reclin'd,
         Lull'd by the song of birds, the murmuring wind,
Has sunk to calm tho' momentary rest.
Ah! would 'twere mine in Spring's green lap to find
         Such transient respite from the ills I bear!
Would I could taste, like this unthinking hind,
         A sweet forgetfulness of human care,

[Note:] SONNET LIV.
Line 12.
A sweet forgetfulness of human care.
Pope.


'Till the last sleep these weary eyes shall close,
And Death receive me to his long repose.
 
 
 
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