Text: “Silvio” [unknown pseudonym] (ed. Killis Campbell), “To Sarah,” The Poems of Edgar Allan Poe, Ginn and Company, 1917, pp. 139-140


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[page 139, continued:]

TO SARAH

[[n]]

When melancholy and alone,

I sit on some moss-covered stone

Beside a murm’ring stream;

I think I hear thy voice's sound

5

In every tuneful thing around,

Oh! what a pleasant dream. [page 140:]

The silvery streamlet gurgling on,

The mock-bird chirping on the thorn,

Remind me, love, of thee.

10

They seem to whisper thoughts of love,

As thou didst when the stars above

Witnessed thy vows to me; —

The gentle zephyr floating by,

In chorus to my pensive sigh,

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Recalls the hour of bliss,

When from thy balmy lips I drew

[[n]]

Fragrance as sweet as Hermia's dew,

And left the first fond kiss.

In such an hour, when are forgot,

The world, its cares, and my own lot,

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Thou seemest then to be,

A gentle guarding spirit given

To guide my wandering thoughts to heaven,

If they should stray from thee.

 


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Notes:

None.

 

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[S:0 - KCP, 1917] - Edgar Allan Poe Society of Baltimore - Works - To Sarah (ed. K. Campbell, 1917)