VAIN the concern which you express, That uncalled Alard will possess Your house and coach, both day and night, And that Macbeth was haunted less By Banquo's restless sprite. With fifteen thousand pounds a year, Do you complain, you cannot bear An ill, you may so soon retrieve? Good Alard, faith, is modester By much, than you believe. Lend him but fifty louis-d'or, And you shall never see him more: Take the advice, probatum est. Why do the gods indulge our store, But to secure our rest? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE [EXCELLENT] BALLADE OF CHARITIE by THOMAS CHATTERTON THE WIND (2) by EMILY DICKINSON SONNET: 19. ON HIS BLINDNESS by JOHN MILTON MONCH AND JUNGFRAU by ANTON ALEXANDER VON AUERSPERG THE MAID VAR MY BRIDE by WILLIAM BARNES |