Although you do your best to regard me With an air seeming offended, Never can you deny, when all's ended, Calm eyes, that you @3did@1 regard me. However much you're at pains to Offend me, by which I may suffer, What offence is there can make up for The great good he finds who attains you? For though with mortal fear you reward me, Until my sorry sense is plenished, Never can you deny, when all's ended, Calm eyes, that you did regard me. Thinking thus to dismay me You beheld me with disdain, But instead of destroying the gain, In fact with doubled good you paid me. For though you show them how hardly They keep off from leniency bended, Never can you deny, when all's ended, Calm eyes, that you did regard me. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE FOUR BROTHERS by CARL SANDBURG APOLLO AT LAX by KAREN SWENSON THE FLESH AND THE SPIRIT by ANNE BRADSTREET H. BAPTISME (2) by GEORGE HERBERT 23RD STREET RUNS INTO HEAVEN by KENNETH PATCHEN CHELSEA by LILLIAN M. (PETTES) AINSWORTH |