@3The primrose way to the everlasting bonfire.@1 MACBETH II, iii. @3Like a puffed and reckless libertine Himself the primrose path of dalliance treads.@1 HAMLET I, iii. EMBLEM of early seeking, early finding, Frailness whose patience stills the moody cries Of old Time struggling through chaotic skies Where the lashed sleet-gust foams, buffeting and blinding, And then were ever the light in his calm eyes May after May, a star so dear and mild That love by the evening bell and you beguiled Thinks echo charmed to your still bell replies; Pilgrim, to whom the weaker sort will turn Their pale looks, and your pale resolve responds, Your paths are peace, they comfort and not burn, There young Love strolls, old Adage stares in ponds. With what strange wrong was Shakespeare mocked when he So tossed you to the hooves of infamy? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...VARIATIONS FOR A SUMMER EVENING by MICHAEL ANANIA THE CHAPERON by HENRY CUYLER BUNNER A CELEBRATION OF CHARIS: 1. HIS EXCUSE FOR LOVING by BEN JONSON REPRISALS by WILLIAM ROSE BENET TO MR. MURRAY (3) by GEORGE GORDON BYRON THE ENCHANTED ISLAND by LUKE AYLMER CONOLLY FABLE: THE SNAIL AND THE GARDENER by NATHANIEL COTTON |