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 Sonnet XXIX: Farewell, Ye Tow'ring Cedars by Mary Darby Robinson 
						Farewell, ye tow'ring Cedars, in whose shade,Lull'd by the Nightingale, I sunk to rest,
 While spicy breezes hover'd o'er my breast
 To fan my cheek, in deep'ning tints array'd;
 While am'rous insects, humming round me, play'd,
 Each flow'r forsook, of prouder sweets in quest;
 Of glowing lips, in humid fragrance drest,
 That mock'd the Sunny Hybla's vaunted aid!
 Farewell, ye limpid rivers! Oh! farewell!
 No more shall Sappho to your grots repair;
 No more your white waves to her bosom swell,
 Or your dank weeds, entwine her floating hair;
 As erst, when Venus in her sparry cell
 Wept, to behold a brighter goddess there!
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