Leave this gaudy gilded stage, From custom more than use frequented, Where fools of either sex and age Crowd to see themselves presented. To love's theater, the bed, Youth and beauty fly together, And act so well it may be said The laurel there was due to either. 'Twixt strifes of love and war, the difference lies in this: When neither overcomes, love's triumph greater is. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ON A FAIR BEGGAR by PHILIP AYRES TERNISSA, FR HELLENICS by WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR LOVER'S LAMENT by EVA K. ANGLESBURG MERCY PLEADS by LUCRETIA STOUT BELLOWS OVER THE ROSE-LEAVES, UNDER THE ROSE by JOHN BENNETT (1865-1956) THE CORRELATION by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN TO ONE WHO HAD LEFT HER CONVENT TO MARRY by WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT |