Stowey, Friday Morning (1797). My dear Cottle. * * * If you do not like the following verses, or if you do not think them worthy of an edition in which I profess to give nothing but my choicest fish, picked, gutted, and cleaned, please to get some one to write them out and send them, with my compliments to the editor of the "New Monthly Magazine". But if you think as well of them as I do (most probably from parental dotage for my last born) let them immediately follow "The Kiss". God love you, S. T. C.TO AN UNFORTUNATE YOUNG WOMAN.WHOM I HAD KNOWN IN THE DAYS OF HER INNOCENCE.Maiden! that with sullen brow, Inly gnawing, thy distresses Loathing thy polluted lot, Mute the Lavrac [1] and forlorn Soon with renovating wing, ALLEGORICAL LINES ON THE SAME SUBJECT.Myrtle Leaf, that, ill besped, When the scythes-man o'er his sheaf, Lightly didst thou, poor fond thing! Gaily from thy mother stalk [Footnote 1: The Skylark.] Cottle subjected the two poems to severe criticism, and Coleridge replied: |