Ring out your bells, let mourning shows be spread, For love is dead: All love is dead, infected With plague of deep disdain, Worth as naught worth rejected, And faith fair scorn doth gain. From so ungrateful fancy, From such a female franzy, From them that use men thus: Good lord, deliver us. Weep, neighbours, weep: do you not hear it said That love is dead? His death-bed peacock's folly, His winding-sheet is shame, His will false-seeming holy, His sole executor blame. From so ungrateful fancy, From such a female franzy, From them that use men thus: Good lord, deliver us. Let dirge be sung, and trentals rightly read, For love is dead. Sir wrong his tomb ordaineth, My mistress' marble heart, Which epitaph containeth: 'Her eyes were once his dart.' From so ungrateful fancy, From such a female franzy, From them that use men thus: Good lord, deliver us. Alas, I lie: rage hath this error bred; Love is not dead. Love is not dead, but sleepeth In her unmatched mind, Where she his counsel keepeth Till due desert she find. Therefore from so vile fancy, To call such wit a franzy Who love can temper thus: Good lord, deliver us. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...COUSIN NANCY by THOMAS STEARNS ELIOT WRITTEN [OR LINES] IN A YOUNG LADY'S ALBUM by THOMAS HOOD ODE [FOR MUSIC] ON ST. CECILIA'S DAY by ALEXANDER POPE LEGENDARY LIGHTS by ALTER ABELSON AN INVITATION TO A DRINKFEST by FRANKLIN PIERCE ADAMS PRAYER FOR A BOY WITH A KITE by DOROTHY P. ALBAUGH INVOCATION TO SLEEP by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH |