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Of my lay: Love's disillusion Was the burden of my song. DARIA. Remedies and disillusions, Seek ye both beneath one star? Ah! if so, you are not far From its pains and its confusions: For the very fact of pleading Disillusion, shows that thou 'Neath illusion's yoke doth bow,-- And the patient who is needing Remedies doth prove that still The sharp pang he doth endure, For there 's no one seeks a cure Ere he feels that he is ill:-- Therefore to this wrong proceeding Grieved am I to see ye clinging-- Seeking thou thy cure in singing-- Thou thy remedy in reading. CYNTHIA. Casual actions of this class That are done without intention Of a second end, to mention Here were out of place: I pass To another point: There 's no one Who with genius, or denied it,-- Dowered with mind, but has applied it Some especial track to go on: This variety suffices For its exercise and action, Just as some by free attraction Seek the virtues and the vices;-- This blind instinct, or this duty, We three share;--'t is thy delight Nisida to sing,--to write Mine,--and thine to adore thy beauty. Which of these three occupations Is the best--or those that need Skill and labour to succeed, Or thine own vain contemplations?-- Have I not, when morning's rays Gladdened grove and vale and mountain, Seen thee in the crystal fountain At thyself enamoured gaze? Wherefore, once again returning To our argument of love, Thou a greater pang must prove, If from thy insatiate yearning I infer a cause: the spell Lighter falls on one who still, To herself not feeling ill, Would in other eyes seem well. DARIA. Ah! so far, so far from me Is the wish as vain as weak-- (Now my virtue doth not speak, Now but speaks my vanity), Ah! so far, I say, my breast Turns away from things of love, That the sovereign hand of Jove, Were it to attempt its best, Could no greater wonder work, Than that I, Daria, should So be changed in mind and mood As to let within me lurk Love's minutest, smallest seed:-- Only upon one condition Could I love, and that fruition Then would be my pride indeed. CYNTHIA. What may that condition be? DARIA. When of all mankind, I knew One who felt a love so true As to give his life for me, Then, until my own life fled, Him, with gratitude and pride, Were I sure that so he died, I would love though he were dead. NISIDA. Poor reward for love so great Were that tardy recollection, Since, it seems, for th
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