MADAM Fortune, thou in vain Act'st the coy one! I can gain By my own exertions merely All thy favours prized so dearly. Thou art overcome by me, To the yoke I fasten thee; Thou art mine beyond escaping -- But my bleeding wounds are gaping. All my red blood gushes out, My life's courage to the rout Soon is put; I'm vanquish'd lying, And in victory's hour am dying. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...AN ODE TO THE RAIN by SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE LEXINGTON [APRIL 19, 1775] by OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES TO THE BOY by ELIZABETH CLEMENTINE DODGE KINNEY SONNET: 13. TO MR. H. LAWES, ON HIS AIRS by JOHN MILTON TO R.K. by JAMES KENNETH STEPHEN THE MILKMAID by JEFFREYS TAYLOR AUTUMN by JESSIE ALBERT BARNEY A TRIBUTE TO WILL ROGERS AND WILEY POST by ROSETTA THORSON BEACHLER |