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				Title:     Adaption From Mark Akenside: Blank Verse Inscriptions 
			    
Author: Samuel Taylor Coleridge [
More Titles by Coleridge]		                
			    
[For Elegy Imitated from one of Akenside's 'Blank Verse Inscriptions', vide _ante_, p. 69.]
  Whoe'er thou art whose path in Summer lies
  Through yonder village, turn thee where the Grove
  Of branching oaks a rural palace old
  Embosoms--there dwells Albert, generous lord
  Of all the harvest round. And onward thence 
  A low plain chapel fronts the morning light
  Fast by a silent rivulet. Humbly walk,
  O stranger, o'er the consecrated ground;
  And on that verdant Hillock, which thou seest
  Beset with osiers, let thy pious hand 
  Sprinkle fresh water from the brook, and strew
  Sweet-smelling flowers--for there doth Edmund rest,
  The learned shepherd; for each rural art
  Famed, and for songs harmonious, and the woes
  Of ill-requited love. The faithless pride 
  Of fair Matilda sank him to the grave
  In manhood's prime. But soon did righteous Heaven
  With tears, with sharp remorse, and pining care
  Avenge her falsehood. Nor could all the gold
  And nuptial pomp, which lured her plighted faith 
  From Edmund to a loftier husband's home,
  Relieve her breaking heart, or turn aside
  The strokes of death. Go, traveller, relate
  The mournful story. Haply some fair maid
  May hold it in remembrance, and be taught 
  That riches cannot pay for truth or love.
[The end]
Samuel Taylor Coleridge's poem: Adaption From Mark Akenside: Blank Verse Inscriptions
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