William Broome. ?-1745
446. The Rosebud
1 min to read
89 words

QUEEN of fragrance, lovely Rose, The beauties of thy leaves disclose! —But thou, fair Nymph, thyself survey In this sweet offspring of a day. That miracle of face must fail, Thy charms are sweet, but charms are frail: Swift as the short-lived flower they fly, At morn they bloom, at evening die: Though Sickness yet a while forbears, Yet Time destroys what Sickness spares: Now Helen lives alone in fame, And Cleopatra's but a name: Time must indent that heavenly brow, And thou must be what they are now.

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William Broome. ?-1745
447. Belinda's Recovery from Sickness
1 min to read
48 words
Return to The Oxford Book of English Verse, 1250–1900






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