[Page 24]

RETROSPECTION.

1 I turn these leaves with thronging thoughts, and say,
2 Alas! how many friends of youth are dead;
3 How many visions of fair hope have fled,
4 Since first, my Muse, we met. So speeds away
5 Life, and its shadows; yet we sit and sing,
6 Stretched in the noontide bower, as if the day
7 Declined not, and we yet might trill our lay
8 Beneath the pleasant morning's purple wing
9 That fans us; while aloft the gay clouds shine!
10 Oh, ere the coming of the long cold night,
11 Religion, may we bless thy purer light,
12 That still shall warm us, when the tints decline
13 O'er earth's dim hemisphere; and sad we gaze
14 On the vain visions of our passing days!

Text

  • TEI/XML (XML - 62K / ZIP - 6.1K) / ECPA schema (RNC - 357K / ZIP - 73K)
  • Plain text [excluding paratexts] (TXT - 647 / ZIP - 586 )

Facsimile (Source Edition)

(Page images digitized from a copy held at the University of California Libraries.)

Images

PDF

All Images (PDF - 235K)

About this text

Title (in Source Edition): RETROSPECTION.
Themes:
Genres: sonnet

Text view / Document view

Source edition

Bowles, William Lisle, 1762-1850. The Poetical Works of William Lisle Bowles, Vol. I. With Memoir, Critical Dissertation, and Explanatory Notes by George Gilfillan. Edinburgh: James Nichol, 9 North Bank Street..., 1855, p. 24.  (Page images digitized from a copy held at the University of California Libraries.)

Editorial principles

Typography, spelling, capitalization, and punctuation have been cautiously modernized. The source of the text is given and all significant editorial interventions have been recorded in textual notes. This ECPA text has been edited to conform to the recommendations found in Level 5 of the Best Practices for TEI in Libraries version 4.0.0.

Other works by William Lisle Bowles