TIE one end of a rope fast over a beam, And make a slip-noose at the other extreme; Then just underneath let a cricket be set, On which let the lover most manfully get; Then over his head let the snecket be got, And under one ear be well settled the knot. The cricket kicked down, let him take a fair swing; And leave all the rest of the work to the string. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...STREET WINDOW by CARL SANDBURG DEXTER GORDON: COPENHAGEN/AVERY FISHER HALL by KAREN SWENSON THE SABBATH MORNING by JOHN LEYDEN AMOR MUNDI by CHRISTINA GEORGINA ROSSETTI TO NIGHT by PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY |