If chance assigned Were to my mind By very kind Of destiny; Yet would I crave Naught else to have But only life and liberty. Then were I sure I might endure The displeasure Of cruelty, Where now I plain Alas in vain, Lacking my life for liberty. For without th' one Th' other is gone, And there can none It remedy; If th' one be past, Th' other doth waste, And all for lack of liberty. And so I drive As yet alive, Although I strive With misery; Drawing my breath, Looking for death, And loss of life and liberty. But thou that still Mayst at thy will Turn all this ill Adversity; For the repair Of my welfare Grant me but life and liberty. And if not so Then let all go To wretched woe, And let me die; For th' one or th' other There is none other, My death, or life with liberty. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...EXCELSIOR by HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW NEW PRINCE, NEW POMP by ROBERT SOUTHWELL THE UNKNOWN QUANTITY by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN DEEDS UNDONE by GAMALIEL BRADFORD WOOING IN A DREAM by NICHOLAS BRETON THE LYRICS POET'S APOLOGY by RICHARD EUGENE BURTON |