COME, dainty maid, come, leave your books, And give the day to me; Your knitted brow and distant looks For these few hours let be. Your beauty shall not always stay, Your loveliness delight; May even now hastes on her way And sunshine leads to night. The treasures of your mind and heart, Got freely, freely give, Nor follow Science when an Art Allures you -- how to live. Upon your laboratory shelf Let hidden problems wait; Find the sweet mystery of yourself Ere it evaporate. Come, rest beside the singing stream; Give me your rarest hour; Till May, in blue and green, shall dream You are another flower. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ON HIS MISTRESS, THE QUEEN OF BOHEMIA by HENRY WOTTON DAVIDS ELEGIE UPON JONATHAN by JOSEPH BEAUMONT IN WILTSHIRE; SUGGESTED BY POINTS OF SIMILARITY WITH THE SOMME COUNTRY by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN INAUGURATION SONNET: WILLIAM JEWETT TUCKER by HARRY RANDOLPH BLYTHE THE LITTLE ONES by RICHARD EUGENE BURTON SONGS OF THE SEA CHILDREN: 78 by BLISS CARMAN |