Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
England: Vols. I–IV. 1876–79.
Fair Tivy
By Sir William Jones (17461794)F
Thy wild oaken woods, and green eglantine bowers,
Thy banks with the blush-rose and amaranth glowing,
While friendship and mirth claim these laborless hours!
Yet weak is our vaunt while something we want
More sweet than the pleasure which prospects can give;
Come, smile, damsels of Cardigan;
Love can alone make it blissful to live.
That Zephyr around us so lavishly flings!
Perhaps for Bleanpant fresh perfume he composes,
Or tidings from Bronwith auspiciously brings;
Yet weak is our vaunt while something we want
More sweet than the pleasure which odors can give:
Come, smile, damsels of Cardigan;
Love can alone make it blissful to live.
And cheered us with numbers so frolic and free!
The poet is absent: be just to his merit;
Ah! may he in love be more happy than we;
For weak is our vaunt while something we want
More sweet than the pleasure the Muses can give:
Come, smile, damsels of Cardigan;
Love can alone make it blissful to live.
Where stately Kilgarran o’erhangs the brown dale;
Where none are unwilling, and few are unable,
To sing a wild song or repeat a wild tale!
Yet weak is our vaunt while something we want
More sweet than the pleasure that friendship can give:
Come, smile, damsels of Cardigan;
Love can alone make it blissful to live.
To cull a rude gibberish from Neatheam or Brooke;
Leave year-books and parchments to gray-bearded sages;
Be nature and love and fair woman our book;
For weak is our vaunt while something we want
More sweet than the pleasure that learning can give:
Come, smile, damsels of Cardigan;
Love can alone make it blissful to live.
And gold were the fruit of rhetorical flowers,
That India supplied us with long-hoarded treasure,
That Dinevor, Slebeck, and Coidsmore were ours;
Yet weak is our vaunt while something we want
More sweet than the pleasure that riches can give:
Come, smile, damsels of Cardigan;
Love can alone make it blissful to live.
We gained the bright ermine robes, purple and red,
And peeped through long perukes, like owlets through ivy;
Or say that bright coronets blazed on our head;
Yet weak is our vaunt while something we want
More sweet than the pleasure that honors can give:
Come, smile, damsels of Cardigan;
Love can alone make it blissful to live.