DEAREST, do not now delay me, Since thou knowest I must be gone; Wind and tide, 'tis thought doth stay me, But 'tis wind that must be blown From thy breath whose native smell Indian odours doth excel. O then speak, my dearest Fair, Kill not him who vows to serve thee, But perfume the neighbouring air, For dumb silence else will starve me 'Tis a word is quickly spoken, Which restrained, a heart is broken. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...CAMPUS SONNET: RETURN - 1917 by STEPHEN VINCENT BENET TRANSLUCENT FINGERS by MALCOLM COWLEY A PORTRAIT OF MY ROOF by JAMES GALVIN THE WORD OF AN ENGINEER by JAMES WELDON JOHNSON ANCHORED TO THE INFINITE by EDWIN MARKHAM |