THE
WEDDING NIGHT.
WITHIN the chamber, far away
From the glad feast, sits Love
in dread
Lest guests disturb, in wanton play,
The silence of the bridal bed.
His torch's pale flame serves to gild
The scene with mystic sacred
glow;
The room with incense-clouds is fil'd,
That ye may perfect rapture
know.
How beats thy heart, when thou
dost hear
The chime that warns thy guests
to fly!
How glow'st thou for those lips so dear,
That soon are mute, and nought
deny!
With her into the holy place
Thou hast'nest then, to perfect
all;
The fire the warder's hands embrace,
Grows, like a night-light,
dim and small.
How heaves her bosom, and how
burns
Her face at every fervent kiss!
Her coldness now to trembling turns,
Thy daring now a duty is.
Love helps thee to undress her fast,
But thou art twice as fast
as he;
And then he shuts both eye at last,
With sly and roguish modesty.
1767.