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Poem
April 14, 1825
The Rhode Island Republican
Newport, Newport County, Rhode Island
What is this article about?
The poem celebrates the blissful innocence of youth, compared to blooming flowers and spring, and reflects on its inevitable fleeting nature and transition to maturity's gloom.
OCR Quality
98%
Excellent
Full Text
Poetry.
From the Boston Spectator.
[BY PERCIVAL]
There is nothing can equal the tender hours,
When life is first in bloom :
When the heart, like a bee in a wild of flowers,
Finds everywhere perfume :
When the present is all, and it questions not,
If those flowers shall pass away,
But, pleased with its own delightful lot,
Dreams never of decay.
O! it dreams not the hue, that freshly glows
On the cheek, shall ever flee,
And fade away like the summer rose,
Or the crimson on the sea,
When far in the west the setting sun
Goes down in the kindled main,
And the colors vanish one by one,
But never revive again.
O! life in its spring-time dances on
In smiles and innocent tears:
It casts not a look to the moments gone,
But hails the coming years:
They shine before its fancy's eye,
Like eastern visions, bright,
Gay as the hues in the western sky
At the coming on of night
Thus happy in all their bosoms feel,
And in all their fancy dreams,
Their quiet moments onward steal
Like the silent flow of streams,
Gliding through tufted flowers away
To the far unknown sea:
So on with a flight that cannot stay
Their days of innocence flee.
But soon--too soon their hearts shall know,
The future was falsely bright,
And its gay and far-deluded glow
Shall change to the gloom of night:
O! then with fond and lingering eye
They shall turn to the early hours,
Where life, as their moments hurried by,
Was a wild of sweets and flowers
From the Boston Spectator.
[BY PERCIVAL]
There is nothing can equal the tender hours,
When life is first in bloom :
When the heart, like a bee in a wild of flowers,
Finds everywhere perfume :
When the present is all, and it questions not,
If those flowers shall pass away,
But, pleased with its own delightful lot,
Dreams never of decay.
O! it dreams not the hue, that freshly glows
On the cheek, shall ever flee,
And fade away like the summer rose,
Or the crimson on the sea,
When far in the west the setting sun
Goes down in the kindled main,
And the colors vanish one by one,
But never revive again.
O! life in its spring-time dances on
In smiles and innocent tears:
It casts not a look to the moments gone,
But hails the coming years:
They shine before its fancy's eye,
Like eastern visions, bright,
Gay as the hues in the western sky
At the coming on of night
Thus happy in all their bosoms feel,
And in all their fancy dreams,
Their quiet moments onward steal
Like the silent flow of streams,
Gliding through tufted flowers away
To the far unknown sea:
So on with a flight that cannot stay
Their days of innocence flee.
But soon--too soon their hearts shall know,
The future was falsely bright,
And its gay and far-deluded glow
Shall change to the gloom of night:
O! then with fond and lingering eye
They shall turn to the early hours,
Where life, as their moments hurried by,
Was a wild of sweets and flowers
What sub-type of article is it?
Ode
Pastoral
What themes does it cover?
Nature Seasons
Moral Virtue
What keywords are associated?
Youth Innocence
Passage Time
Bloom Decay
Nature Metaphors
Spring Flowers
What entities or persons were involved?
Percival
Poem Details
Author
Percival
Subject
Tender Hours Of Youth And Innocence
Form / Style
Rhymed Quatrains
Key Lines
There Is Nothing Can Equal The Tender Hours,
When Life Is First In Bloom :
O! Life In Its Spring Time Dances On
In Smiles And Innocent Tears:
But Soon Too Soon Their Hearts Shall Know,
The Future Was Falsely Bright,
And Its Gay And Far Deluded Glow
Shall Change To The Gloom Of Night: