THE BEAUTY OF LAURA IS PEERLESS In one fair star I saw two brilliant eyes, With sweetness, modesty, so glistening o'er, That soon those graceful nests of Love before My worn heart learnt all others to despise: Equall'd not her whoever won the prize In ages gone on any foreign shore; Not she to Greece whose wondrous beauty bore Unnumber'd ills, to Troy d**h's anguish'd cries:
Not the fair Roman, who, with ruthless blade Piercing her chaste and outraged bosom, fled Dishonour worse than d**h, like charms display'd; Such excellence should brightest glory shed On Nature, as on me supreme delight, But, ah! too lately come, too soon it takes its flight. Macgregor.