Love's coach, they say, is made of ebony, And drawn by turtle-doves of silver hue, To show the brightness of pure amity, With turtles yok't, than turtles what more true? Along whose sides the purple silk doth twind The silver ouches to the golden wheels; So outward beauty should a lover bind, For who the outward love the inward feels, Eyesight confirms, but virtues motives be: 'Tis not alone thy face I love, but thee. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE OWL by PHILIP EDWARD THOMAS THE HUNTER'S SONG by WILLIAM BASSE EPITAPH ON TWO YOUNG MEN NAMED LEITCH IN CROSSING THE RIVER SOUTHESK by JAMES BEATTIE DEDICATION TO POEMS, LYRICS AND SONNETS by LOUISA SARAH BEVINGTON TO JOSEPH JOACHIM by ROBERT SEYMOUR BRIDGES ZOPHIEL; OR THE BRIDE OF SEVEN: CANTO 3. PALACE OF THE GNOMES by MARIA GOWEN BROOKS REMEMBRANCE by MARGARET E. BRUNER A SONG OF PITCAIRN'S ISLAND by WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT SONG: A LADY, RESCUED FROM DEATH BY A KNIGHT, WHO LEAVES HER by THOMAS CAREW |