[682] 1837.

... Shakespeare's scene—
Rebuke us not!— 1835.

[683] See, in Constable's "England's Helicon," Dametus' song to his Diaphenia, stanza 2—

Diaphenia like the spreading roses
That in thy sweets all sweet encloses.

Also in Fairfax's translation of Tasso's Godfrey of Bullogne; or the Recovery of Jerusalem, book ii. stanza 18—

A veil obscured the sunshine of her eyes,
The rose within herself her sweetness closed.—Ed.

[684] This "votive Tablet" may still be seen, with its "green ivy," "fringing the lettered stone." Compare the Sonnet To the Author's Portrait, p. [318].—Ed.

[685] 1827.

Shall ... 1835.