I WHY, Dearest, should'st thou weep, when I relate The story of my woe? Let not the swarthy mists of my black Fate, O'er cast thy beauty so, For each rich pearl lost on that score, Adds to mischance, and wounds your servant more. II Quench not those stars, that to my bliss should guide, Oh, spare that precious tear! Nor let those drops unto a deluge tide, To drown your beauty there. That cloud of sorrow makes it night, You lose your lustre, but the world its light. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...METAMORPHOSES: BOOK 8. BAUCIS AND PHILEMON by PUBLIUS OVIDIUS NASO THE ROSE TREE by WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS TO A YOUNG MAN ON THE PLATFORM OF A SUBWAY EXPRESS by FRANKLIN PIERCE ADAMS AFTER-SIGHT by WILLIAM ROSE BENET IN A LETTER TO A.R.C. ON HER WISHING TO BE CALLED ANNA by MATILDA BARBARA BETHAM-EDWARDS THE UNPARDONABLE SIN by LOUISA SARAH BEVINGTON |