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1774–1843

SONNET XI.

Robert Southey

My friendly fire, thou blazest clear and bright, Nor smoke nor ashes soil thy grateful flame; Thy temperate splendour cheers the gloom of night, Thy genial heat enlivens the chill'd frame.

I love to muse me o'er the evening hearth, I love to pause in meditation's sway; And whilst each object gives reflection birth, Mark thy brisk rise, and see thy slow decay:

And I would wish, like thee, to shine serene, Like thee, within mine influence, all to cheer; And wish at last, in life's declining scene, As I had beam'd as bright, to fade as clear:

So might my children ponder o'er my shrine, And o'er my ashes muse, as I will muse over thine.

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SONNET XI. · Robert Southey · Poetry Cove