FAIR, if you expect admiring; Sweet, if you provoke desiring; Grace dear love with kind requiting! Fond, but if thy light be blindness; False, if thou affect unkindness; Fly both love and love's delighting! Then when hope is lost and love is scorned, I'll bury my desires, and quench the fires that ever yet in vain have burned. Fates, if you rule lovers' fortune; Stars, if men your powers importune; Yield relief by your relenting! Time, if sorrow be not endless, Hope made vain, and pity friendless, Help to ease my long lamenting! But if griefs remain still unredressed, I'll fly to her again, and sue for pity to renew my hopes distressed. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...HER LIKENESS by DINAH MARIA MULOCK CRAIK CYNTHIADES: TO CYNTHIA ON CONCEALMENT OF HER BEAUTY by FRANCIS KYNASTON REBEL COLOR-BEARERS AT SHILOH by HERMAN MELVILLE POLLY by WILLIAM BRIGHTY RANDS THE WAITER AND THE ALLIGATOR by G. W. A. WILD ROSES by RHODA S. BARCLAY |