I FOND Love, deliver up thy bow, I am become more Love than thou; I am as wanton grown, and wild, Much less a man, and more a child, From Venus born, of chaster kind, A better archer, though as blind. II Surrender without more ado, I am both King and Subject too, I will command, but must obey, I am the hunter, and the prey, I vanquish, yet am overcome, And sentencing receive my doom. III No springing Beauty 'scapes my dart, And ev'ry ripe one wounds my heart; Thus whilst I wound, I wounded am, And, firing others, turn to flame, To show how far Love can combine The mortal part with the divine. IV Faith, quit thine Empire, and come down, That thou and I may share the Crown, I've tri'd the worst thy arms can do, Come then, and taste my power too, Which (howsoe'er it may fall short) Will doubtless prove the better sport. V Yet do not; for in field and town, The females are so loving grown, So kind, or else so lustful, we Can neither err, though neither see; Keep then thine own dominions, Lad, Two Loves would make all women mad. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...FREEDOM by RALPH WALDO EMERSON KILLED AT THE FORD by HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW THE DAY OF JUDGEMENT by JONATHAN SWIFT LITTLE JESUS by FRANCIS THOMPSON WHAT IS THE SPIRIT? by KATHARINE LEE BATES THE PUPPETS by PIERRE JEAN DE BERANGER |