Classic and Contemporary Poetry
SONG, by JOHN DOWLAND Poet's Biography First Line: I must complain, yet do enjoy my love Last Line: She hath more beauty than becomes the chaste. Subject(s): Happiness; Joy; Delight | ||||||||
I MUST complain, yet do enjoy my love, She is too fair, too rich in beauty's parts: Thence is my grief, for Nature while she strove With all her graces and divinest arts, To form her too, too beautiful of hue, She had no leisure left to make her true. Should I aggrieved then wish she were less fair? That were repugnant to my own desires: She is admired, new suitors still repair, That kindle daily love's forgetful fires: Rest, jealous thoughts, and thus resolve at last, She hath more beauty than becomes the chaste. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE STUDY OF HAPPINESS by KENNETH KOCH SO MUCH HAPPINESS by NAOMI SHIHAB NYE CROWD CONDITIONS by JOHN ASHBERY I WILL NOT BE CLAIMED by MARVIN BELL THE BOOK OF THE DEAD MAN (#21): 1. ABOUT THE DEAD MAN'S HAPPINESS by MARVIN BELL |
|