'Hast thou then nought wiser to bring Than worn-out songs of moon and of rose?' 'Cracked my voice, and broken my wing, God knows.' 'Tell'st thou no truth of the life that @3is@1; Seek'st thou from heaven no pitying sign?' 'Ask thine own heart these mysteries, Not mine.' 'Where then the faith thou hast brought to seed? Where the sure hope thy soul would feign?' 'Never ebbed sweetness -- even out of a weed -- In vain.' 'Fool. The night comes. . . . 'Tis late. Arise. Cold lap the waters of Jordan stream.' 'Deep be their flood, and tranquil thine eyes With a dream.' | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...PROLOGUE, SPOKEN BY MR. GARRICK AT ... THEATRE ROYALE, 1747 by SAMUEL JOHNSON (1709-1784) THE SPIRIT OF SHAKESPEARE: 2 by GEORGE MEREDITH RETURN OF SPRING by PIERRE DE RONSARD ASTROPHEL AND STELLA: 39 by PHILIP SIDNEY THE DESPAIRING LOVER by WILLIAM WALSH (1663-1707) ODE; SUNG BY THE CHILDREN OF THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS by W. T. ADAMS |