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The Doves.

By William Cowper

Topics: classic

Reasoning at every step he treads,     Man yet mistakes his way;     While meaner things, whom instinct leads,     Are rarely known to stray.     One silent eve I wanderd late,     And heard the voice of love;     The turtle thus addressd her mate,     And soothed the listening dove:     Our mutual bond of faith and truth     No time shall disengage,     Those blessings of our early youth     Shall cheer our latest age:     While innocence without disguise,     And constancy sincere,     Shall fill the circles of those eyes,     And mine can read them there;     Those ills, that wait on all below,     Shall neer be felt by me,     Or gently felt, and only so,     As being shared with thee.     When lightnings flash among the trees,     Or kites are hovering near,     I fear lest thee alone they seize,     And know no other fear.     Tis then I feel myself a wife,     And press thy wedded side,     Resolved a union formd for life     Death never shall divide.     But oh! if, fickle and unchaste     (Forgive a transient thought),     Thou couldst become unkind at last,     And scorn thy present lot;     No need of lightnings from on high,     Or kites with cruel beak;     Denied the endearments of thine eye,     This widowd heart would break.     Thus sang the sweet sequesterd bird,     Soft as the passing wind;     And I recorded what I heard,     A lesson for mankind.

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"Reasoning at every step he treads,..." by William Cowper

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

William Cowper

About William Cowper

William Cowper (1731–1800) was an English poet and hymnodist whose work bridges the gap between the Augustan age and Romanticism. His poems "The Task" and "John Gilpin" were enormously popular, and his hymn "God Moves in a Mysterious Way" remains widely sung.

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