Poor melancholy bird—that all night long
First Line | Poor melancholy bird—that all night long |
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Author | Charlotte Turner Smith |
Date | 1786 |
Description | Sonnet [Animals, pets]. Transcribed from Smith, Charlotte Turner. "Sonnet III. To a Nightingale." Elegiac sonnets, 3rd. ed., 1786, p. 4. Eighteenth Century Collections Online, GALE|CW0114875362. |
Links |
Transcription
Poor melancholy bird — that all night long
Tell'st to the Moon, thy tale of tender woe;
From what sad cause can such sweet sorrow flow,
And whence this mournful melody of song?
Thy poet's musing fancy would translate
What mean the sounds that swell thy little breast,
When still at dewy eve thou leav'st thy nest,
Thus to the listening night to sing thy fate.
Pale Sorrow's victims wert thou once among,
Tho' now releas'd in woodlands wild to rove,
Say — hast thou felt from friends some cruel wrong,
Or diedst thou — martyr of disastrous love?
Ah! songstress sad! — that such my lot might be,
To sigh and sing at liberty — like thee!
Beinecke Osborn c130
Title | Untitled |
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Period | 1761-1790 |
Archive | Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library |
p. 92
Local title: By the same to a nightingale.
Attributed author: By the same [Charlotte Smith].
Adaptation: n/a
Other variants: n/a
Other: Part of a series of six sonnets by Charlotte Smith.
Beinecke Osborn c343
Title | Poetry |
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Period | 1791-1820 |
Archive | Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library |
p. 96
Local title: To a nightingale.
Attributed author: n/a
Adaptation: n/a
Other variants: n/a
Other: n/a
Bodleian MS Eng. poet. d. 189
Title | Untitled |
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Period | 1791-1820 |
Archive | Bodleian Library |
p. 180
Local title: Sonnet to a Nightingale.
Attributed author: n/a
Adaptation: n/a
Other variants: n/a
Other: crossed-out.