CLARISSA, when you passed me by With scornful lip and haughty eye, My fault I did deplore, Your anger, like a poisoned dart, Struck death into my guilty heart, I vowed to sin no more. Clarissa, when you did forgive And bid my fainting heart to live, Nor killed me with disdain, So soft your eye, so sweet your lip, Where like a bee I hung to sip, I fain would sin again. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE BELL by WILLIAM HENRY DAVIES TO MY FRIENDS, WHO RIDICULED A TENDER LEAVE-TAKING by MATTHEW ARNOLD S. BARNABAS by JOSEPH BEAUMONT THE DYING DRAGOMAN by MATHILDE BLIND THE HISTORY OF ARCADIUS AND SEPHA: BOOK 2 by WILLIAM BOSWORTH |