THE play is done, yet our suit never ends, Still when you part, you would still part our friends, Our noblest friends. If aught have fallen amiss, Oh, let it be sufficient that it is, And you have pardoned it. (In buildings great, All the whole body cannot be so neat But something may be mended.) Those are fair, And worthy love, that may destroy, but spare. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SCHOOLBOYS IN WINTER by JOHN CLARE INSCRIPTION FOR A FOUNTAIN ON A HEATH by SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE A TIME TO TALK by ROBERT FROST THE HILL WIFE: LONELINESS by ROBERT FROST THE MARTYR; INDICATIVE OF PASSION OF PEOPLES APRIL 15, 1865 by HERMAN MELVILLE COMPLAINS, BEING HIND'RED THE SIGHT OF HIS NYMPH by PHILIP AYRES |