On your midnight pallet lying, Listen, and undo the door: Lads that waste the light in sighing In the dark should sigh no more; Night should ease a lover's sorrow; Therefore, since I go to-morrow, Pity me before. In the land to which I travel, The far dwelling, let me say Once, if here the couch is gravel, In a kinder bed I lay, And the breast the darnel smothers Rested once upon another's When it was not clay. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A QUOI BON DIRE by CHARLOTTE MEW THE SLEEPER by EDGAR ALLAN POE ASTROPHEL AND STELLA: 109 by PHILIP SIDNEY THE NO-LONGER-MERRY ANCIENT MONARCH by FRANKLIN PIERCE ADAMS CLIO, NINE ECLOGUES IN HONOUR OF NINE VIRTUES: APOLOGY TO CLEO by WILLIAM BASSE |