TO get a Love and Beauty so divine, (In these so wary times) the fact must be Of greater fortunes to the world than mine; Those are the steps to that felicity; For love no other gate hath than the eyes, And inward worth is now esteem'd as none; Mere outsides only to that blessing rise, Which Truth and Love did once account their own; Yet as she wants her fairer, she may miss The common cause of love, and be as free From earth, as her composure heavenly is; If not, I restless rest in misery, And daily wish, to keep me from despair, Fortune my mistress, or you not so fair. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ON THE EXPECTED GENERAL RISING OF THE FRENCH NATION IN 1792 by ANNA LETITIA BARBAULD THE EARLY MORNING by HILAIRE BELLOC ODE TO TOBACCO by CHARLES STUART CALVERLEY THE ENAMEL GIRL by GENEVIEVE TAGGARD IN THE GARDEN AT SWAINSTON (IN MEMORIAM - SIR JOHN SIMEON) by ALFRED TENNYSON SONNETS OF MANHOOD: 2. THE FLOWER ASLEEP by GEORGE BARLOW (1847-1913) |