Edward Coate Pinkney

  • I Fill this cup to one made up
      Of loveliness alone,
    A woman, of her gentle sex
      The seeming paragon;
    To whom the better elements
      And kindly stars have given
    A form so fair, that, like the air,
      ’T is less of earth than heaven.

    ...
  • I burn no incense, hang no wreath,
      On this thine early tomb:
    Such cannot cheer the place of death,
      But only mock its gloom.
    Here odorous smoke and breathing flower
      No grateful influence shed;
    They lose their perfume and their power,...

  • Look out upon the stars, my love,
      And shame them with thine eyes,
    On which, than on the lights above,
      There hang more destinies.
    Night’s beauty is the harmony
      Of blending shades and light;
    Then, lady, up,—look out, and be
      A sister...

  • We break the glass, whose sacred wine
      To some beloved health we drain,
    Lest future pledges, less divine,
      Should e’er the hallowed toy profane;
    And thus I broke a heart that poured
      Its tide of feelings out for thee,
    In draught, by after-times...

  • I fill this cup to one made up
      Of loveliness alone,
    A woman, of her gentle sex
      The seeming paragon;
    To whom the better elements
      And kindly stars have given
    A form so fair, that, like the air,
      ’T is less of earth than heaven.

    ...