An Apology.

’Tis true that my glances have wandered1
                        
                        O’er the faces around me that bloom,2
                        
                        And many the smile I have squandered,3
                        
                        But ask now when, where, and on whom.4
                        If my looks are so brimful of meaning,5
                        
                        I vow I would rather be blind6
                        
                        Than to feel, while enjoyment I’m gleaning,7
                        
                        That a lecture will follow behind.8
                        It were idle to cast a reflection9
                        
                        On the needle’s consistence and worth,10
                        
                        Though it wavers in every direction11
                        
                        Ere it steadfastly points to the North.12
                        All day though the bee seems a rover,13
                        
                        As he murmurs o’er garden and green,14
                        
                        He carries the sweets of the clover15
                        
                        At eve to the feet of his queen.16
                        There are blossoms that owe all their brightness17
                        
                        To the hue that each chiefly displays,18
                        
                        But you are the snowdrop whose whiteness19
                        
                        Is the blending of infinite rays.20
                        As the gay tints of Art wake a yearning21
                        
                        For Nature’s sweet emerald hue,22
                        
                        So is born in my glances returning23
                        
                        New light as they rest upon you.24